HOME    NEWS    SPECIAL REPORT    PHOTO    COMMENTARY    VOICE
NEWS > Technology
Study: extrasolar planet half hot, half freezing
2006-10-14 02:07:09 Xinhua English

LOS ANGELES, Oct. 12 (Xinhua) -- Using NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, astronomers have for the first time measured the temperatures on a planet outside our Solar System, and found the planet blisteringly hot on one side, frigid on the other.

The scientists on Thursday reported their findings at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Pasadena, California. The study also appeared in the Oct. 12 online advance edition of the journal Science.

The planet, 40 light years (400 trillion kilometers) from Earth and named Upsilon Andromeda b, is about 75 percent the mass of Jupiter, orbiting its star every 4.6 days.

Upsilon Andromeda b was discovered in 1996 around its sun Upsilon Andromeda, which is away and visible to the naked eye at night in the constellation Andromeda.

The researchers determined that the temperature variation between the planet's light side and its dark side could reach 1,600 degrees Celsius -- its sunlit side could be hot as 1,400 to 1,650 degrees Celsius, while the dark side only minus 20 to 230 degrees Celsius.

On the other hand, Jupiter, the similar giant gas planet in our Solar System, maintains an even temperature all around.

"This planet has a giant hot spot in the hemisphere that faces the star," said Joe Harrington, the lead author of the study from the University of Central Florida, Orlando.

"The temperature difference between the day and night sides tells about how energy flows in the planet's atmosphere. Essentially, we're studying weather on an exotic planet."

The extreme temperature difference between the two sides of the planet could mean that its atmosphere absorbs and re-radiates sunlight rapidly, allowing the circling gases to quickly cool off as they move from light side to dark side, the researchers said.

The findings could completely change scientists' view about exotic gas giant planets, the researchers said.

Most astronomers expected them to be more uniformly heated like our Jupiter, but this planet clearly has a hot side and a cool side. The researchers believe that the planet is "tidally locked" to its star, meaning that it rotates slowly enough that the same side always faces its star. Enditem

MORE NEWS
China marks 50th anniversary of aerospace industry  
Sony battles iPod with new Walkman player  
ADB to help reduce pollution in Inner Mongolia  
Astronomers get 1st detailed images of binary asteroid  
GameStop to take limited, 50-USD preorder for Nintendo Wii  
Innovation funding set to soar by 2010  
Palm unveils Treo smart-phones with Google Maps  
Nation sets out goals for space exploration  

SINA English is the English-language destination for news and information about China. Find general information on life, culture and travel in China through our news and special reports£¬or find business partners through our online Business Directory. For investment opportunities with SINA, please click the link "Investor" below.
| About SINA | Investor | Media Kit | Comments or Question? |
Copyright © 1996-2006 SINA Corporation, All Rights Reserved