Pso Rogue Planet
PSO J318.5-22 is a rogue planet an extrasolar planet that does not orbit any star. It is approximately 80 light-years away from Earth, and belongs to the Beta Pictoris moving group.The estimated age of this planet is around 12 million years. Based on its calculated temperature and age, it is classified under the brown dwarf spectral type L7.. Dr Michael Liu, the team leader of the Institute
PSO J318.5-22 is a young, free-floating planetary-mass object approximately 75 light-years away in the constellation Capricornus. It is extremely faint, about 100 billion times fainter in optical light than the planet Venus. This object is likely a rogue exoplanet or a low-mass brown dwarf.
PSO J318.5-22 belongs to a special class of planets called rogue, or free-floating, planets. Wandering alone in the galaxy, they do not orbit a parent star. These rogue planets glow faintly from the heat of their formation. Once they cool down, they will be dancing in the dark.
This multicolor image from the Pan-STARRS 1 telescope in Hawaii shows the free-floating planet PSO J318.5-22 in the constellation Capricornus. The planet is extremely cold and faint, about 100
PSO J318.522 is an extrasolar object of planetary mass that does not orbit a parent star, it is an analog to directly imaged young gas giants. 6 There is no consensus yet among astronomers whether the object should be referred to as a rogue planet , 7 8 as a young brown dwarf , 9 10 or as a sub-brown dwarf .
A rare, rogue exoplanet without a parent star drifts through space just 80 light-years from Earth, astronomers say. The object may be the lowest-mass free-floating planet found to date in the
Discovered in October 2013 using direct imaging, PSO J318.5-22 belongs to a special class of planets called rogue, or free-floating, planets. Wandering alone in the galaxy, they do not orbit a parent star. that they may be either failed stars or planets ejected from very young systems after an encounter with another planet. These rogue
If a rogue planet aligns closely with a more distant star from our vantage point, the star's light will bend as it travels through the curved space-time around the planet. PSO J318.5-22 belongs to a special class of planets called rogue, or free-floating, planets. Wandering alone in the galaxy, they do not orbit a parent star. These rogue
Known Rogue Planet Candidates. Over the past two decades, astronomers have identified several promising candidates for rogue planets. Here are a few of the most fascinating PSO J318.5-22. Discovered in 2013, PSO J318.5-22 is a lonely giant planet, about six times the mass of Jupiter. It floats 80 light-years from Earth in the constellation
They'd prefer to call objects like PSO J318.5-22 quotplanetary-mass objects,quot or planemos for short. PSO J318.5-22 was discovered while the researchers was combing through data from Pan-STARRS 1 for