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  • Updated: July 23, 2021

Astronomers Detect Possible ‘Moon-Forming Disc’ For The First Time

Astronomers Detect Possible ‘Moon-Forming Disc’ For The

(Photo Credit: Yahoo)

Astronomers have discovered a moon-forming disc around a planet outside of our solar system that is believed to be a region with exomoons in the making for the first time.

This is the first time that scientists can be sure they have seen such a disc – which could be forming new satellites around its host world – around an exoplanet.

The disk of dust around a young exoplanet in a star system dubbed PDS 70 located 370 light-years from Earth was found by Myriam Benisty and a team from the University of Grenoble.

A researcher from the Earth and Planets Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution for Science, Jaehan Bae, USA, and author on the study said “These new observations are also extremely important to prove theories of planet formation that could not be tested until now,”

“Our ALMA observations were obtained at such exquisite resolution that we could clearly identify that the disc is associated with the planet and we are able to constrain its size for the first time,” she adds.

The team found the first protoplanet (PDS 70b) in the system back in 2018 using European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope in Chile. A year later, they found another young gas giant (PDS 70c) using the same equipment.

The astronomers believe based on the data they have that the star system is only 10 million years old and that both gas giants are several times bigger than Jupiter. To know more about the system, they focused all other possible instruments on it, including the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array. ALMA is made up of 66 short-wavelength radio dishes, and its observations made it possible to spot the dust around PDS 70c.

The disk of dust spans a distance slightly wider than that between Earth and the Sun, and there's enough mass in there for three moons the same size as ours. Benisty says the moons may have already formed, but there's no conclusive proof yet because they can't be seen with ALMA. According to Science, the Extremely Large Telescope, which will be the world's largest optical telescope when it's built, may have the power to see if the moons have already formed around the protoplanet. The telescope is still under construction, though, and scientific operations won't start until 2027 at the earliest.

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