11/03/2024 Une énorme exo-planète en orbite autour d’un soleil minuscule

On trouve de tout dans l’espace interplanétaire, à condition de s’éloigner suffisamment de la Terre. Ci-dessous nous publions les références d’un article d’astronomes ayant découvert une planète de la taille de notre Jupiter, orbitant en 3,2 de nos jours autour d’un soleil neuf fois moins massif que notre propre soleil.

Les auteurs de la découverte ne comprennent pas comment un couple aussi disparate a pu se former et se maintenir. Un peu de psychanalyse pourrait peut-être les aider

Référence

A Neptune-mass exoplanet in close orbit around a very low-mass star challenges formation models

 SCIENCE
30 Nov 2023
Vol 382, Issue 6674
pp. 1031-1035

DOI: 10.1126/science.abo0233

  • Editor’s summary

Planets form in protoplanetary disks of gas and dust around young stars that are undergoing their own formation process. The amount of material in the disk determines how big the planets can grow. Stefánsson et al. observed a nearby low-mass star using near-infrared spectroscopy. They detected Doppler shifts due to an orbiting exoplanet of at least 13 Earth masses, which is almost the mass of Neptune. Theoretical models do not predict the formation of such a massive planet around a low-mass star (see the Perspective by Masset). The authors used simulations to show that its presence could be explained if the protoplanetary disk were 10 times more massive than expected for the host star. —Keith T. Smith

Abstract

Theories of planet formation predict that low-mass stars should rarely host exoplanets with masses exceeding that of Neptune. We used radial velocity observations to detect a Neptune-mass exoplanet orbiting LHS 3154, a star that is nine times less massive than the Sun. The exoplanet’s orbital period is 3.7 days, and its minimum mass is 13.2 Earth masses. We used simulations to show that the high planet-to-star mass ratio (>3.5 × 10−4) is not an expected outcome of either the core accretion or gravitational instability theories of planet formation. In the core-accretion simulations, we show that close-in Neptune-mass planets are only formed if the dust mass of the protoplanetary disk is an order of magnitude greater than typically observed around very low-mass stars.

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