Source - http://www.startribune.com/
By - JAMES BROOKS
Category - Vacations In Santa Clarita
Posted By - Hampton Inn Santa Clarita
By - JAMES BROOKS
Category - Vacations In Santa Clarita
Posted By - Hampton Inn Santa Clarita
Vacations In Santa Clarita |
Astronomers have for the first time managed to determine the color of
a planet outside our solar system, a blue gas giant 63 light-years
away.
Using the Hubble Space Telescope, an international team
said the planet known as HD 189733B would look like a deep blue dot if
viewed up close.
"Measuring the planet's color is a real first — we have
never managed it before with a planet outside our own solar system,"
Frederic Pont of the University of Exeter in England said Friday.
While Earth looks blue from space because of its oceans,
the astronomers said the planet's color was created by a hazy turbulent
atmosphere of silicate particles that scatter blue light. To determine
the planet's color, the team measured the amount of light reflected off
its surface as it passed behind its star.
Discovered in 2005, the planet belongs to a class of giant gas
planets called "hot Jupiters" that orbit close to their stars. It has a
daytime temperature of around 1,000 degrees Celsius (1,832 F), and the
heat causes rocks to evaporate and glass to possibly rain sideways in
howling 4,500 mph (about 7,250 kph) winds.
Astronomers chose the planet for observation because of
its proximity to Earth and size in relation to the star it orbits. A
light-year is nearly 6 trillion miles.
Pont said the technology the astronomers used pushed the
Hubble telescope to its limit given the distance and light from other
stars obscuring their view.
"People keep coming up with a better way of viewing
planets indirectly so I'm sure the technology will eventually improve,"
Pont said.
No comments:
Post a Comment