And not only the exoplanet – WASP-189b – is extreme; his mother star also turns out to be quite special.
The brand new planet hunter CHEOPS has now been in space for several months. CHEOPS’s job is to reveal more information about mysterious worlds already discovered. And the planet hunter certainly does not fall short in this. Because now, during its very first, real mission, CHEOPS has managed to unmask the secrets of a very special exoplanet.
Although scientists have long speculated about the existence of exoplanets, the first was not discovered until 1995. In the meantime, the counter has already reached at least 4000 exoplanets, mainly due to the great achievements of planet hunter Kepler. We now know that the universe is home to a very wide range of exoplanets, ranging from gaseous worlds larger than Jupiter to smaller, rocky planets. And now it’s up to CHEOPS to learn more about these mysterious worlds. The satellite will therefore not start looking for exoplanets itself, but will instead continue research into already discovered planets. The detection of an exoplanet is just the beginning. What Kepler – and other planet hunters like the recently launched TESS – are telling us is where the exoplanets are, how long it takes them to complete a circle around their star, and their approximate size. But it often ends there. Other specialized tools are needed to uncover the secrets of these exoplanets. What are they made of? Do they have an atmosphere? Are they livable? These are just some of the questions that astronomers hope to find answers to in the near future. And ESA’s CHEOPS, launched in December 2019, can help.–
CHEOPS has set its sights on – as it turns out – one of the most extreme exoplanets ever. The planet hunter was staring at the 2018 exoplanet WASP-189b orbiting the hot star HD 133112. And that resulted in some very interesting discoveries. For example, WASP 189b is much larger than expected with nearly 1.6 times the radius of Jupiter from our own solar system. Moreover, the planet is a real ‘ultra-hot Jupiter’. Hot Jupiters are, as the name suggests, giant gas planets that look a bit like Jupiter. However, they rotate much closer to their host star and are thus heated to extreme temperatures. The researchers think that WASP-189b is about 20 times closer to its star than Earth is to the sun. The planet orbits its parent star in just 2.7 days.
Extreme hitte
It means that the temperatures on the planet can get quite high. To determine how hot it could get, the researchers used CHEOPS to observe WASP-189b as it passed behind its host star. “Because the planet is so bright, there is actually a noticeable dip in light that we see coming out of the system when it disappears from view for a moment,” explains lead author Monika Lendl. “We used this to measure the brightness of the planet and keep its temperature down to a scorching 3,200 degrees Celsius.” This makes WASP-189 b one of the hottest and most extreme planets known to us. Moreover, the planet is completely different from the planets from our own familiar solar system. At the measured high temperatures, even metals such as iron melt and turn into gas. And that makes WASP-189b – unsurprisingly – clearly uninhabitable.