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We’ve seen a star devouring a planet for the first time

In a preview of what’s to come for Earth in about 5 billion years, astronomers have spotted a sun-like star gobbling up a planet and belching out a blast of light and energy
This artist?s impression shows a doomed planet skimming the surface of its star. Astronomers used a combination of telescopes to spot the first direct evidence of an aging, bloated sun-like star, like the one pictured here, engulfing its planet. These telescopes included the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF) at Caltech?s Palomar Observatory, the W.M. Keck Observatory, and NASA?s NEOWISE mission. Stars swell up in size as they age and run out of fuel. Our sun, which is 4.6 billion years old, will expand into what is called a red giant about 5 billion years from now. The aging star depicted here, called ZTF SLRN-2020, is roughly 10 billion years old. It had begun to inflate over hundreds of thousands of years as it transformed into a red giant, and, as a result, inched closer to its inner planet. According to astronomers, when the planet was almost touching the surface of the star, the increasing frictional forces caused the planet to rapidly spiral inward. Eventually, on timescales that are not certain, the planet plunged into the core of the star. When that happened, the star inflated to four times its size and brightened by a factor of more than a hundred. ZTF caught this brightening in optical light, which peaked for about a week before fading. Meanwhile, NEOWISE spotted a rise in infrared light nine months before the planet plunged into the star. The infrared light spotted by NEOWISE came from the glow of dust in the system, which was generated when gaseous material from the star and disintegrating planet blew outward and cooled to form dust. ZTF SLRN-2020 lies 15,000 light-years away in the constellation Aquila.
An artist’s impression of a planet about to get munched by a star
K. Miller and R. Hurt/Caltech/IPAC

Astronomers have caught a star in the act of devouring one of its planets for the first time. Someday, our own sun will expand just like this star, enveloping the other inner planets, so this system is a sort of preview of Earth’s fate.

at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and his colleagues used the Zwicky Transient Facility in California to spot a strange burst of light that was designated ZTF SLRN-2020, coming from a star around 13,000 light years away. Over the course of around 10 days, it brightened by a factor of about 100.

The outburst was similar to a phenomenon called a red nova, caused by a merger between two stars, but it wasn’t quite as bright and didn’t give off quite as much energy. After collecting more observations with other telescopes, the researchers found that the data was consistent with a star devouring not another star, but a gas giant planet at least 30 times the mass of Earth.

We knew that stars eat planets because we have seen the aftermath in stars polluted by chemicals from the worlds they devoured. “In the past, all of the evidence that we’ve had of stars eating planets is from looking at stars that have done that hundreds of thousands of years ago,” says De. “But we have never caught a star red-handed eating a planet.”

This is expected to occur when a sun-like star exhausts its hydrogen fuel and switches to fusing helium. In the process, the star becomes a red giant and its atmosphere expands outwards, engulfing any planets with the misfortune of orbiting too close. In ZTF SLRN-2020’s case, the planet took less than one Earth day to orbit its star.

The sun is due to start its expansion in about 5 billion years. “We are actually seeing the fate of our own planet happen in real time to another unfortunate planet,” says De. “If you were observing our solar system from 10,000 light years away, what you would see is the sun would also brighten in a similar way, but the effect would be nowhere near as dramatic because Earth is so much smaller than [the planet] is.”

Now that we know what a planetary engulfment looks like, it will be much easier to search for them and study them in more detail, De says. The researchers calculated that this should occur around once a year within our galaxy, so we should be able to find more planets being devoured by their stars, as well as continue to observe this one, and work out the details of the process – and of Earth’s future demise.

Journal reference:

Nature

Topics: Exoplanets / Stars