“This is exactly the kind of planet we envisioned discovering when we designed GPI,” said James Graham, a UC Berkeley professor of astronomy and the GPI project scientist. “We wanted to find planets when they’re young so we can figure out the formation process.”
The planet is estimated to be about twice the mass of Jupiter, and orbits at a distance of 13 astronomical units, or slightly farther from its star than Saturn is from the sun. One astronomical unit, or AU, is equal to the Earth-sun distance, or 150 million kilometers (93 million miles). Two of the stars in the system form a close pair far from the planet’s host star, and apparently do not affect the planet’s orbit.
Spectra of the planet reveal methane gas as well as water, similar to the conditions thought to occur deep in Jupiter’s atmosphere.
“Judging by its low luminosity, low temperature and strong methane signature, this is the most Jupiter-like exoplanet ever directly imaged,” said Graham.
“Many of the exoplanets astronomers have studied before have atmospheres that look like very cool stars,” said Bruce Macintosh, a professor of physics in the Kavli Institute at Stanford University, who led the construction of GPI and now leads the survey. “This one looks like a planet.”
Graham, Macintosh, De Rosa, Wang and their team members will publish their results online Aug. 13 in Science Express.
Hot start vs cold start
Astronomers believe that the gas giants in our solar system formed by building up a large rocky core over a few million years and then pulling in a huge amount of hydrogen and other gases to form an atmosphere. But the gas-giant exoplanets that have so far been discovered by direct imaging are hot, hinting that they formed much faster as material collapsed rapidly to make a very hot planet, a so-called “hot-start” scenario. The cold-start scenario, called core accretion, can also form rocky planets like Earth and Mars, but the hot-start model of gravitational collapse might only make giant gas planets.
The low temperature of 51 Eridani b, estimated to be about 430 Celsius (800 Fahrenheit), may mean that this is the first example of a directly imaged planet that is consistent with a cold-start formation mechanism, the team concluded.
“The exoplanet 51 Eri b is the first one that’s cold enough and close enough to the star that it could have indeed formed right where it is the ‘old-fashioned way,'” Macintosh said. “This planet really could have formed the same way Jupiter did – this whole planetary system could be a lot like ours.”
There are hundreds of planets a little bigger than Earth out there, Macintosh said, but there is so far no way to know if they are really “super Earths” or just micro-sized gas and ice planets like Neptune — or something different altogether. Using GPI to study more young solar systems such as 51 Eridani, he said, will help astronomers understand the formation of our neighbor planets, and how common that planet-forming mechanism is throughout the universe.
“Our knowledge today of how planets form reminds me of our knowledge 50 to 60 years ago of how stars form,” Graham said.
Direct imaging
Fewer than a handful of exoplanets have been imaged, but even without an image, astronomers have found ways to study their atmospheres. When a planet passes in front of its star – a so-called transit – some of the star’s light is blocked or absorbed, yielding a spectral signature of the chemicals in the atmosphere. The frequencies (wavelengths or colors) of light reflected by a planet can provide similar information.