Researchers find exoplanet that appears to be too big for its sun
UCI astronomer says the discovery scrambles solar system models.
Friday, December 01, 2023
Brian Bell
UCI News
This artistic rendering shows the possible view from LHS 3154b toward its low-mass star, LHS 3154. The relative sizes of the exoplanet and star are causing astronomers to reevaluate previous assumptions about planet and solar system formation. Researchers say that given its large mass, LHS 3154b likely has a composition similar to that of Neptune.
Picture Credit:
Penn State
A research team including UCI astronomers has discovered an exoplanet that is far too massive for its sun, casting doubt on what was previously understood about the formation of planets and their solar systems. Using the Habitable Zone Planet Finder instrument connected to the Hobby-Eberly Telescope at McDonald Observatory in Texas, the researchers detected planet LHS 3154b, which is 13 times more massive than Earth, orbiting the “ultracool” star LHS 3154, which is nine times less massive than our sun. The finding is the subject of a paper published today in Science.
“The HPF instrument was designed to study exoplanets orbiting dwarf stars, so in that regard, this was a perfectly normal project, but the results were anything but ordinary,” said co-author Paul Robertson, UCI associate professor of physics and astronomy and HPF project scientist. “This is the first time such a high-mass planet has been found orbiting close to a lower-mass star, and it calls into question our previous assumptions about interactions between stars and planets.”