New Jupiter-mass binary planets spotted in a nearby stellar nursery, reviving the JuMBO debate

1 min read
Source: Live Science
New Jupiter-mass binary planets spotted in a nearby stellar nursery, reviving the JuMBO debate
Photo: Live Science
TL;DR Summary

Astronomers analyzing archival infrared and Gaia data found two wide, Jupiter-mass binary objects in the Lower Centaurus-Crux star-forming region, adding weight to the JuMBO concept while showing such free-floating planet-sized binaries are rare (about 2% of rogue planets in that region). This new evidence suggests some previously claimed JuMBOs in the Orion Nebula may have been misidentified stars, but the existence of planet-mass binaries is becoming more plausible. Researchers plan follow-up observations with the ESO's Very Large Telescope to better characterize these systems and their implications for planet formation and potential habitability through tidal heating.

Share this article

Reading Insights

Total Reads

0

Unique Readers

10

Time Saved

60 min

vs 61 min read

Condensed

99%

12,01595 words

Want the full story? Read the original article

Read on Live Science