NASA Detects Baby Planet 26
neema writes "Yesterday, NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope (web site here) detected the youngest planet, at less than 1 million years old, known to exist. The planet, for those of you who want to visit or something, is 420 light years away circling the star CoKu Tau 4. According to astronomer Dan Watson of the University of Rochester, the discovery of this "Baby Planet" "really causes problems for the major theories of planetary formation." Arist conception pictures and more info can be found at the Planetary Photojournal."
Fake Pics? (Score:3, Interesting)
because (Score:5, Informative)
Re:because (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Fake Pics? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Fake Pics? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Fake Pics? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Fake Pics? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Fake Pics? (Score:4, Informative)
I suspect that the actual images have much too low a resolution to actually resolve the planet from the star (the laws of physics limit what can actually be resolved by even a perfect telescope of a given size) and instead that the presence of the planet is deduced by its spectral signature. Also, it looks like they observed not so much a planet but a cleared area of the protoplanetary disks which suggests the presence of a young planet.
The spectra themselves can be seen here:
http://www.spitzer.caltech.edu/Media/relea
Also, pictures are almost always very heavily processed. The raw pictures usually have more noise than signal and are often taken at wavelengths that would be invisable to the human eye. Colors in modern astronomical pictures are
often translated from other "colors" we cannot see or psuedocolored to highlight subtle changes in intensity in a monochromatic image.
NASA, whose budget is at the mercy of public perception (a largely scientifically illiterate public jaded by Hollywood special effects and advertising) is very PR conscious and tends to come up with these artist's conceptions to give the common person something to latch onto. In this case NASA had the integrity to identify the picture as an artists conception but that disclosure was not faithfuly reproduced by the press.
Re:Fake Pics? (Score:3, Informative)
Last year I taught a course on the role of art in astronomy. "Artists interpretations" have a significant impact in shaping the public's impressions of astronomy, for better or for wo
Current theory is guesswork at best. (Score:5, Insightful)
So, any kind of theory-making that goes on now is inherently guesswork without enough data. It's like trying to do a comprehensive study of zoology using only the animals living in the park across the street.
Jon Acheson
420 light years, eh? (Score:1, Funny)
Hell, I'll bite (Score:1)
I've got a couple of questions regarding your post, cheezus. Since your post was modded "troll" rather than "funny," I'll assume you were serious. Of course, humor is harder to recognize in pure text messages, so feel free to correct this assumption if necessary.
(1) What is the connection between your subject line and your statements? Do you feel that the measurement of distance is wildly inaccurate and thus the astrophysicists responsible are incompetent?
(2) Or is it that you believe that the theori
Re:Hell, I'll bite (Score:3, Informative)
Cheezus was making a joke. He wasn't serious.
Of course, humor is harder to recognize in pure text messages, so feel free to correct this assumption if necessary.
It was a pretty obvious joke, especially if you're over 30. Of course, the moderator didn't get it either.
What is the connection between your subject line and your statements?
The connection i
Make that (Score:2)
Re:Make that (Score:2)
The Baby Planet? (Score:3, Funny)
So THAT'S where they come from...
Press release (Score:5, Informative)
The baby planet is not the big discovery. The scientists find organic chemistry more interesting (they would).
Carbon Dated? (Score:1)
By the age of the star. (Score:4, Informative)
Since the star it's circling, CoKu Tau 4, is estimated to be about a million years old, then this potential planet should be younger.
Shape of Developing Planet (Score:2)
Apparently it looks like a donut. Maybe Homer was right [metafilter.com]! Mmmmm, donuts.
young (Score:2)