RELEASE UNDER EMBARGO
UNTIL 11:30 A.M. EDT MONDAY JUNE 5, 2006
NEW STUDY SUGGESTS 'PLANEMOS' MAY SPAWN PLANETS AND MOONS
Forget our traditional ideas of where a planetary system forms - new
research led by a University of Toronto astronomer confirms that planetary
nurseries can exist not only around stars but also around objects that are
themselves not much heftier than Jupiter. It suggests that miniature
versions of the solar system may circle objects that are some 100 times less
massive than our sun.
That's the dramatic conclusion of two studies being presented Monday, June 5
at the American Astronomical Society meeting in Calgary by Professor Ray
Jayawardhana and his colleagues. The new findings show that objects only a
few times more massive than Jupiter are born with disks of dust and gas, the
raw material for planet making. Research done by Jayawardhana's group and
others in recent years had shown that disks are common around failed stars
known as "brown dwarfs". Now, they report, the same appears to be true for
their even punier cousins, sometimes called planetary mass objects or
"planemos." These objects, discovered within the past five years, have
masses similar to those of extra-solar planets, but they are not in orbit
around stars - instead, they float freely through space.
"Now that we know of these planetary mass objects with their own little
infant planetary systems, the definition of the word 'planet' has blurred
even more," says Jayawardhana, an associate professor of astronomy and
astrophysics. "In a way, the new discoveries are not too surprising - after
all, Jupiter must have been born with its own disk, out of which its bigger
moons formed."
Unlike Jupiter, however, these planemos are not circling stars. In the first
study, Jayawardhana and Valentin Ivanov of the European Southern Observatory
(ESO) in Chile used two of ESO's telescopes - the 8.2-metre Very Large
Telescope and the 3.5-metre New Technology Telescope - to obtain optical
spectra of six candidates identified recently by researchers at the
University of Texas at Austin led by Katelyn Allers. Two of the six
turned out to have masses
between five to 10 times that of Jupiter while two others are a tad heftier,
at 10 to 15 times Jupiter's mass. All four of these objects are just a few
million years old and are located in star-forming regions about 450
light-years from Earth. The planemos show infrared emission from dusty disks
that may evolve into miniature planetary systems over time.
In the other study, Subhanjoy Mohanty (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for
Astrophysics, CfA), Jayawardhana (UofT), Nuria Huelamo (ESO) and Eric
Mamajek (CfA) used the Very Large Telescope to obtain infrared images and
spectra of a planetary mass companion discovered two years ago around a
young brown dwarf that is itself about 25 times the mass of Jupiter. The
brown dwarf, dubbed 2M1207 for short and located 170 light-years from Earth,
was known to be surrounded by a disk. Now, this team has found evidence for
a disk around the eight-Jupiter-mass companion as well. Researchers think
the pair probably formed together, just like a binary star system, instead
of the companion forming in a disk around the brown dwarf. Moreover,
Jayawardhana says, it is quite likely that smaller planets or moons could
now form in the disk around each one.
Both sets of discoveries point to objects not much more massive than Jupiter
forming the same way as stars like the sun, and perhaps being accompanied by
their own retinues of small planets. "The diversity of worlds out there is
truly remarkable," Jayawardhana adds. "Nature often seems more prolific than
our imagination."
CONTACT:
Professor Ray Jayawardhana
Office: 416-946-7291
Cell: 647-233-7749
Hotel in Calgary (June 4 to 6): 403-717-1234
rayjay@astro.utoronto.ca
Sonnet L'Abbe
U of T Strategic Communications
Office: 416-978-6974
sonnet.labbe@utoronto.ca
Image credit: Art by www.jonlomberg.com
Image caption: Astronomers have found disks of dust and gas, the raw
material for planet making, around objects that are only a few times heftier
than Jupiter. These findings suggest that miniature versions of the solar
system may circle "planemos" that are some 100 times less massive than our
Sun. (Click on the image for high resolution version)