‘Forbidden’ planet somehow escaped consumption by its dying host star

1 year ago 59

MORE FROM NEW SCIENTIST

This image by NASA?s James Webb Space Telescope?s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) features the central region of the Chamaeleon I dark molecular cloud, which resides 630 light years away. The cold, wispy cloud material (blue, center) is illuminated in the infrared by the glow of the young, outflowing protostar Ced 110 IRS 4 (orange, upper left). The light from numerous background stars, seen as orange dots behind the cloud, can be used to detect ices in the cloud, which absorb the starlight passing through them.

JWST has seen building blocks of life in a dark, cold cloud in space

The James Webb Space Telescope has observed a frigid cloud of dust and gas where stars are forming, and it found frozen elements that are crucial for the development of life

This illustration shows material from a star being devoured by a supermassive black hole

Supermassive black hole snacks on the same star once every few years

A black hole almost 900 million light years away consumes part of an orbiting star every time it gets too close

Abell 370 picture

Astronomers saw a distant supernova less than 6 hours after it blew up

The Hubble Space Telescope has captured a distant star exploding earlier than ever before, allowing astronomers to watch the first eight days of a star’s violent death

most massive planet-hosting star pair to date

An unexpected giant planet is orbiting a massive pair of stars

We thought that planets couldn’t form around stars with more than three times the mass of the sun, but planet b Cen (AB)b challenges the idea

Read Original