If confirmed, the dark gap in space debris will challenge astronomers' theories
A mysterious gap in a star’s dusty shell of debris could be the
signature of a young planet circling its sun at twice the distance of
Pluto’s orbit. If it does exist, the far-flung planet’s birth may be
hard for astronomers to explain.
“If this is a planet, it is extremely challenging for existing
planet formation theories,” says Katherine Kretke, an astronomer at the
Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo.
Most planets are thought to begin their lives as small clumps of
hot, rapidly moving dust and gas within vast disks of debris that orbit
newborn stars. As a planet grows it behaves like a snow plow, scooping
up some material to bulk up while flinging other material away, until it
has cleared a smooth orbital path.
John Debes, an astronomer at the Space Telescope Science
Institute in Baltimore, used the Hubble Space Telescope to study a disk
around TW Hydrae, a 10-million-year-old star located about 176
light-years from Earth.
Hubble images revealed an unmistakable gap 12 billion kilometers
from the star, 80 times farther than Earth is from the sun. “It’s very
striking,” says Phil Armitage, an astrophysicist at the University of
Colorado Boulder. “It looks like what you’d expect from a forming
planet.”
If the planet’s existence is confirmed, astronomers have their
work cut out for them explaining how it got there. Compared with
particles in tighter orbits, ones near that gap are less densely packed
and move much more slowly, Kretke says. As a result, it would be
difficult for a potential planet to accrue enough material to clear its
own orbit.
An alternative theory of planet formation posits that clumps of
gas within a disk can rapidly collapse together in a process similar to
the one that forms stars. That could account for the outer bulky planets
recently discovered around the star HR 8799 (SN Online: 12/3/10).
But Kretke says that process is capable only of building worlds more
massive than Jupiter, while this potential planet would be the size of
Neptune or a large Earth.
“No matter how you look at it, if there’s a planet there it’s
going to change theories of how planets form,” Debes says. His team’s
results appear June 14 in the Astrophysical Journal.
The next step is to find the planet, Debes says, which will be no
easy task. Just identifying the gap in TW Hydrae’s disk was akin to
seeing a groove in an LP record from six kilometers away; now
astronomers hope to find a speck hidden within that groove.
Debes notes that the Hubble photos were taken by a nearly
20-year-old instrument; he is confident that next-generation telescopes
will see the planet if it exists.
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