europeanspaceagency posted a photo:
Ever wondered how planetary systems like our own Solar System form? Thanks to the European Space Agency’s Gaia space telescope, we're getting a unique peek behind the cosmic curtain into these dusty environments.
In this collage, we see the images of 31 baby star systems. Click on the white dots next to each system to find out more about them. The bar on the top right shows the scale of the image in Astronomical Units (AU).
The collage also shows our own Solar System for reference on the bottom right, as it is predicted to have looked at an age of 1 million years, with the Sun at its centre (not visible).
All of the systems are centred around very young stars that have recently collapsed from vast clouds of gas and dust.
After the clouds collapsed under their own gravity, they spun faster and flattened into discs with hot, dense centres. These centres became the stars, sometimes multiple stars were formed. The discs around them are called protoplanetary discs.
The 31 baby systems are shown here in orange-purple, as seen by the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) ground-based telescope.
Astronomers expect the remaining material in protoplanetary discs to clump together to form planets, but until now it’s been very difficult to spot them because of all the dust and gas present in discs. To date, very few planets have been detected around forming stars.
Enter Gaia.
In 31 out of 98 young star systems, Gaia has detected subtle motions that suggest the presence of unseen companions. For seven of these systems, the observed motions are consistent with objects of planetary mass. In eight systems, the data best match the presence of brown dwarfs – objects larger than planets but smaller than stars. The remaining sixteen systems likely have additional stars around.
Gaia’s predicted locations of these companions in the systems are shown in cyan. In the reference image of our baby Solar System, Jupiter’s orbit is also shown in cyan.
Gaia discovered the companions in the baby star systems thanks to its unique ability to sense the gravitational tug or ‘wobble’ a planet or companion induces on a star. This technique had already been used to find companions around older stars. But now, for the first time, a team of astronomers led by Miguel Vioque of the European Southern Observatory, Germany, has used this Gaia technique to find planets and companions around stars that are still forming.
The all-sky, large-scale nature of the Gaia survey enabled the team to study hundreds of forming stars and identify companions across large samples for the first time. This in contrast to costly ground-based searches that can only target a few stars at a time.
This ability of Gaia is revolutionising the field of star and planet formation. The companions that the telescope has already found, can now be followed up by telescopes like the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space telescope that can study the inner discs of the baby systems in more detail.
With Gaia’s upcoming fourth data release, many more hidden planets are expected to be uncovered.
This new finding has been described in ‘Astrometric view of companions in the inner dust cavities of protoplanetary disks’ by M. Vioque et al., accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics.
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[Image description: A collage of 32 glowing discs on a black background. Each disc shows concentric rings in vivid colours: purple, orange, and yellow, with bright cyan centres. The discs vary in size and orientation, creating a striking pattern of circular and elliptical shapes.]
Credits: ESO, ESA/Gaia/DPAC, M. Vioque et al.; CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO
europeanspaceagency posted a photo:
This composite NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image shows the debris ring and dust clouds cs1 and cs2 around the star Fomalhaut. For comparison, dust cloud cs1, imaged in 2012, is pictured with dust cloud cs2, imaged in 2023. The dashed circles mark the location of these clouds. When dust cloud cs2 suddenly appeared, astronomers quickly noticed they had witnessed the violent collision of two massive objects. Previously thought to be a planet, cs1 is now classified as a similar debris cloud. In this image, Fomalhaut itself is masked out to allow the fainter features to be seen.
This image was created from Hubble data from proposal #17139 (P. Kalas).
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Credits: NASA, ESA, P. Kalas (UC Berkeley), J. DePasquale (STScI); CC BY 4.0
europeanspaceagency posted a photo:
This artist’s concept shows the sequence of events leading up to the creation of dust cloud cs2 around the star Fomalhaut.
[Image description: This four-panel image labelled 1 to 4 shows the sequence of events leading up to, during, and following the collision of two objects in orbit around a star.]
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Credits: NASA, ESA, STScI, R. Crawford (STScI); CC BY 4.0
europeanspaceagency posted a photo:
This composite NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image shows the debris ring and dust clouds cs1 and cs2 around the star Fomalhaut. For comparison, dust cloud cs1, imaged in 2012, is pictured with dust cloud cs2, imaged in 2023. The dashed circles mark the location of these clouds. When dust cloud cs2 suddenly appeared, astronomers quickly noticed they had witnessed the violent collision of two massive objects. Previously thought to be a planet, cs1 is now classified as a similar debris cloud. In this image, Fomalhaut itself is masked out to allow the fainter features to be seen. Its location is marked by the white star.
This image was created from Hubble data from proposal #17139 (P. Kalas).
[Image description: Image labeled Fomalhaut system, Hubble Space Telescope. A grainy orange oval ring tilts slightly from upper right to lower left. At two o’clock, a white box outlines the ring’s edge and white lines extend to a larger pullout at lower right. Two spots are labeled cs1 2013 and cs2 2023. Inside the ring is a black circle with a white star symbol in the middle.]
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Credits: NASA, ESA, P. Kalas (UC Berkeley), J. DePasquale (STScI); CC BY 4.0
PROVIDENCE (ANP/AFP) - Amerikaanse autoriteiten hebben een verdachte geïdentificeerd in de schietpartij op Brown University afgelopen weekend, melden diverse Amerikaanse media. Bij de schietpartij kwamen twee studenten om het leven, negen anderen raakten gewond.
ABC News schrijft op basis van meerdere bronnen dat de schietpartij op de universiteit mogelijk verband houdt met de moord op een MIT-professor. Maandagavond werd MIT-professor Nuno F.G. Loureiro neergeschoten aangetroffen in zijn huis in Boston. De 47-jarige Loureiro overleed dinsdag in het ziekenhuis.
Zaterdag vond de schietpartij op Brown University plaats. De schutter sloeg daarna op de vlucht.
LONDEN (ANP) - Michael van Gerwen heeft na een moeizame partij de tweede ronde van het WK darts in Londen bereikt. De 36-jarige drievoudig wereldkampioen won in Alexandra Palace met 3-1 in sets van de Japanner Mitsuhiko Tatsunami.
Van Gerwen moest de eerste set aan Tatsunami laten, vooral door missers bij het uitgooien van de legs. In de tweede set kwam de Brabander zelfs met 2-0 in legs achter en leek een verrassing op komst. Mighty Mike herstelde zich echter met goede scores en trok alsnog de set naar zich toe en daarna ook de derde set.
In de vierde set verloor Van Gerwen de eerste leg die hij zelf begon, waarop Tatsunami opnieuw uitliep naar 2-0. De Japanner miste meerdere pijlen om het in sets gelijk te trekken, waarop Van Gerwen de partij na meerdere missers alsnog kon uitgooien.