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Space

Two Massive Jupiter-Sized Exoplanets Discovered With TESS (phys.org) 19

Using NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), an international team of astronomers has detected two new extrasolar planets. Phys.Org reports: The newfound alien worlds, designated TOI-5152 b and TOI-5153 b, are the size of Jupiter but about three times more massive than the solar system's biggest planet. [...] TOI-5152 b has a radius of about 1.07 Jupiter radii and is approximately three times more massive than Jupiter. It orbits its parent star every 54.19 days, at a distance of some 0.31 AU from it. The planet's equilibrium temperature was measured to be 688 K. The host TOI-5152 is a G1-type star nearly two times larger than the sun, located about 1,200 light years away from the Earth. Its age is estimated to be between 1.4 and 6.8 billion years.

TOI-5153 b has a mass of 3.26 Jupiter masses, while its radius was estimated to be 1.06 Jupiter radii. The orbital period of this exoplanet was measured to be 20.33 days and its distance to the host is nearly 0.16 AU. The astronomers calculated that the equilibrium temperature of TOI-5153 b is at a level of 906 K. The parent star is of spectral type F8. It is about 40% larger than the sun and is assumed to be 5.4 billion years old. The distance to this planetary system is about 1,270 light years. Therefore, TOI-5152 b and TOI-5153 b are warm and massive Jupiter-sized alien worlds. The astronomers noted that they are both metal-enriched and their heavy element content is consistent with the mass-metallicity relation of gas giants. Given that the two planets orbit moderately bright stars, the authors of the paper added that they are ideal targets for additional observations.
The findings have been reported on the arXiv pre-print repository.
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Two Massive Jupiter-Sized Exoplanets Discovered With TESS

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  • I don't care (Score:2, Offtopic)

    by nagora ( 177841 )

    We've established that large exoplanets are about as common as stars themselves; it's not news. Earth-sized is news.

    • Same. I was thinking "pfffft... like who hasn't discovered a Jupiter-size exoplanet orbiting very close to their parent star".
    • Yes, I was trying to figure out what about this was newsworthy. Not quite hot Jupiters [universetoday.com] (more like "warm" Jupiters), but nevertheless, more than 5000 exoplanets [nasa.gov] have been found to date, so what is it about these two in particular that makes them interesting?

  • Things don't end so well for TESS...

  • by niff ( 175639 ) <{moc.liamg} {ta} {kciretfinnavretuow}> on Wednesday July 20, 2022 @05:39AM (#62718194) Homepage

    688K is 415C

    • And 906K is 633C

    • Well, yes. And ?

      I went through that list of properties going "Mercury-like", "Mercury-like", "Mercury-like" ... And indeed a surface temperature of 688K isn't that far from Mercury-like.

      How much would a surface temperature like that affect the composition of the upper atmosphere? You'd expect the mean-free path of the hydrogen and helium to be increased. Maybe some photolytic reactions to free H/ He from whatever compounds it's in. Trouble is, that would create a density inversion in the upper atmosphere,

  • Imma ask them "y'all got any space weed?" Hopefully they will and we won't have to travel to another planet for boring stuff like rock gathering and soil testing.

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