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Home Latest News

New Jupiter-like planet is largest yet discovered orbiting two stars

byCT Report
14/06/2016
in Latest News, Science
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LONDON: A gas giant 3,700 light years away is the largest planet yet to be found orbiting two stars, scientists have revealed.

Dubbed Kepler-1647b, the Jupiter-like planet lies in the constellation Cygnus, and was spotted by astronomers examining data from the Kepler space telescope – an instrument launched in 2009 to look for potentially habitable planets beyond our solar system.

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Not only is it the largest “circumbinary” planet, it also has one of the longest orbits ever recorded for a transiting planet, taking 1,107 days to complete its circuit.

But it isn’t the only body on the move. As Kepler-1647b travels around the system, the two stars are, themselves, in orbit around each other.

“Every 11 days the stars eclipse each other, so it is like a clock,” said Veselin Kostov, lead author of the new research from Nasa’s Goddard Space Flight Center. For an observer watching from Kepler-1647b, that could lead to an intriguing spectacle.

“Sometimes one will be able to see first the larger star rise or set followed by the smaller one,” said Tobias Cornelius Hinse, a co-author of the research from the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute. “But, under special circumstances, one could also imagine [seeing] only one star setting or rising, when the smaller star is hiding behind the larger one during sunrise or sunset.”

Presented at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society by an international team of scientists, the research is based on data from the Kepler space telescope, together with a host of ground-based measurements and computer models.

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