Peering Through Cosmic Dust: James Webb Telescope Is on the Hunt for Newborn Planets
By UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
MAY 5, 2024
This artists impression shows the formation of a gas giant planet embedded in the disk of dust and gas in the ring of dust around a young star. A University of Michigan study, led by U-M astronomer Gabriele Cugno, aimed the James Webb Space Telescope at a protoplanetary disk surrounding a protostar called SAO 206462, hoping to find a gas giant planet in the act of forming.
Planets form in disks of dust and gas called protoplanetary disks that whirl around a central protostar during its final assembly.
Although several dozens of such disks have been imaged, just two planets have been caught in the act of forming so far. Now, astronomers are aiming the powerful instruments aboard the James Webb Space Telescope at protoplanetary disks to try to find early clues about the ways in which planets form, and how these planets influence their natal disk.
A trio of studies led by the University of Michigan, University of Arizona, and University of Victoria combined JWSTs images with prior observations made by the Hubble Space Telescope and the Atacama Large Millimeter Array, or ALMA, in Chile. Based on the ancillary observations, the team used JWST to observe protoplanetary disks HL Tau, SAO 206462, and MWC 758 in hopes of detecting any planets that might be forming.
In the papers, published in The Astronomical Journal, the researchers pieced together previously unseen interactions between the planet-forming disk and the envelope of gas and dust surrounding the young stars at the center of the protoplanetary disks.
To catch a planet
The U-M study, led by U-M astronomer Gabriele Cugno, aimed JWST at a disk surrounding a protostar called SAO 206462. There, the researchers potentially found a planet candidate in the act of forming in a protoplanetary diskbut it wasnt the planet they expected to find.
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