http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewpr.html?pid=19246PRESS RELEASE
Date Released: Monday, March 13, 2006
Source: Ohio State University
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- An international collaboration of astronomers has discovered a "super-Earth" orbiting in the cold outer regions of a distant solar system about 9,000 light-years away. The planet weighs 13 times as much as Earth, and at -330 degrees Fahrenheit, it's one of the coldest planets ever discovered outside our solar system.
Andrew Gould, leader of the MicroFUN collaboration and professor of astronomy at Ohio State University, pointed to two key implications of the discovery. "First," Gould said, "this icy super-Earth dominates the region around its star that in our solar system is populated by the gas-giant planets, Jupiter and Saturn. We've never seen a system like this before, because we've never had the means to find them."
"And second," he added, "these icy super-Earths are pretty common. Roughly 35 percent of all stars have them."
The astronomers have submitted a paper on the planet to Astrophysical Journal Letters, and posted a copy on the Internet preprint server arXiv.org (
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0603276)...
http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewpr.html?pid=19245Super-Earths May Be Three Times More Common Than Jupiters
PRESS RELEASE
Date Released: Monday, March 13, 2006
Source: Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
Cambridge, MA - Astronomers have discovered a new "super-Earth" orbiting a red dwarf star located about 9,000 light-years away. This newfound world weighs about 13 times the mass of the Earth and is probably a mixture of rock and ice, with a diameter several times that of Earth. It orbits its star at about the distance of the asteroid belt in our solar system, 250 million miles out. Its distant location chills it to -330 degrees Fahrenheit, suggesting that although this world is similar in structure to the Earth, it is too cold for liquid water or life.
Orbiting almost as far out as Jupiter does in our solar system, this "super-Earth" likely never accumulated enough gas to grow to giant proportions. Instead, the disk of material from which it formed dissipated, starving it of the raw materials it needed to thrive.
"This is a solar system that ran out of gas," says Harvard astronomer Scott Gaudi of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA), a member of the MicroFUN collaboration that spotted the planet.
The discovery is being reported today in a paper posted online at
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0603276 and submitted to The Astrophysical Journal Letters for publication...