快猫短视频

Water found in atmosphere of exo-Neptune

The smallest exoplanet yet to have its atmosphere probed is full of water and heavy elements, hinting it formed far from its star
An artist's depiction of the Neptune-sized planet HAT-P-11b crossing in front of its star in the constellation Cygnus
An artist鈥檚 depiction of the Neptune-sized planet HAT-P-11b crossing in front of its star in the constellation Cygnus
(Image: NASA/JPL-Caltech)

Exo-forecast: it鈥檚 foggy out there. For the first time, water vapour has been detected in the atmosphere of a Neptune-sized planet outside the solar system.

Previously, astronomers had found water in the atmospheres of so-called hot Jupiters, which are as massive or larger than Jupiter and orbit scorchingly close to their stars. But similar efforts for smaller planets had been stymied by hard-to-interpret data.

Now, of the University of Maryland, College Park, and colleagues have used the Hubble and Spitzer space telescopes to study , a planet 123 light-years away in the constellation Cygnus. With a radius four times that of Earth, it鈥檚 the smallest yet to have its atmosphere probed.

In addition to water vapour, they found a lot of hydrogen, and some oxygen and heavier elements.

鈥淚t does look like a Neptune clone, only hotter,鈥 says planetary scientist of the Space Science Institute in Seabrook, Texas. This molecular profile suggests that the planet formed far from its star, then moved closer.

The observation is a 鈥渞ung on the ladder鈥 down to being able to study the atmospheres of Earth-like exoplanets, says of Grinnell College in Iowa.

It isn鈥檛 clear why other exo-Neptunes鈥 atmospheres have been so hard to probe. High clouds or a very compressed atmosphere of heavier molecules such as carbon dioxide might be to blame for the lack of signal. 鈥淚t has been an annoyance,鈥 says Kempton. 鈥淲e kept observing these planets that should be interesting and we鈥檝e see nothing.鈥

Journal reference: Nature, DOI: 10.1038/nature13785

Topics: Astronomy / Cosmology