about us   subscribe   site map   
 

Image Archive
• Hall of Fame
• Wallpapers
• Zoomable
• View All
• Top 100
• Top 100 zip file screen size (27Mb)
• Top 100 zip file original size (1.4Gb)
• Advanced Search
• Image formats

Artist’s impression of an ultra-short-period planet

Click for larger image

This is an artist’s impression of a unique type of exoplanet discovered with the Hubble Space Telescope. The planet is so close it to its star that it completes an orbit in 10.5 hours. The planet is only 750,000 miles (about 1207 kilometres) from the star, or 1/130th the distance between Earth and the Sun.

The Jupiter-sized planet orbits an unnamed red dwarf star that lies in the direction of the Galactic Centre; the exact stellar distance is unknown. Hubble detected the planet in a survey that identified 16 Jupiter-sized planets in short-period, edge-on orbits (as viewed from Earth) that pass in front of their parent stars. Hubble could not see the planets, but measured the dimming of starlight as the planets passed in front of their stars.

This illustration presents a purely speculative view of what such a "hot Jupiter" might look like. It could have a powerful magnetic field that traps charged particles from the star. These particles create glowing auroral rings around the planet’s magnetic poles. A powerful magnetic flux tube links the planet and star. This enhances stellar activity and triggers powerful flares. A powerful stellar wind creates a bow shock around the planet. The planet’s atmosphere seethes at 1,650 degrees Celsius.

Credit: NASA, ESA and A. Schaller (for STScI)

 

Info

Related News
Related Videos
Id:heic0612c
Object:Sagittarius, SWEEPS
Type:Star, Miscellaneous
Instru-ment:ACS
Width:5600
Height:4800

Downloads

Images
Fullsize Original
21,367 KB
Massive file!
Large JPEG
2,315 KB
Publication TIFF
10,889 KB
Publication JPEG
2,268 KB
Screensize JPEG
101 KB
 
Zoomable
Zoomable

 
Wallpapers
1024 x 768
121 KB
1280 x 1024
185 KB
1600 x 1200
270 KB