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목성의 남동생 직접 촬영

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Deungjeong Kyungsoon
Deungjeong Kyungsoon
"경순은 통찰력 있고 사악한 사상가로, 다양한 음악 장르에 깊은 지식을 가지고 있습니다. 힙스터 문화와 자연스럽게 어우러지는 그의 스타일은 독특합니다. 그는 베이컨을 좋아하며, 인터넷 세계에서도 활발한 활동을 보여줍니다. 그의 내성적인 성격은 그의 글에서도 잘 드러납니다."

~에 의해

W.M. Keck Observatory를 사용하여 오스틴에 있는 텍사스 대학의 Kyle Franson이 이끄는 천문학자 팀은 AF Lep b라는 이름의 가장 낮은 질량의 행성 중 하나의 이미지를 직접 촬영했습니다. 천체 물리학 저널 레터스(Astrophysical Journal Letters)에 발표된 이 발견은 젊은 태양과 같은 별 주위를 공전하는 거대한 행성을 탐지하는 데 천문학 기술을 처음으로 사용한 것으로 기록됩니다.

과학자들은 질량이 가장 작은 행성 중 하나인 AF Lep b를 이미지화하기 위해 천문학이라는 기술을 사용했습니다. 이 방법은 외계 행성, 특히 지구에 대한 거리, 질량 또는 방향 때문에 탐지하기 어려운 외계 행성을 발견하는 방식에 혁명을 일으킬 수 있습니다.

하와이 마우나케아에 있는 WM 켁 천문대를 사용하는 천문학자들은 지금까지 직접 촬영한 가장 작은 행성 중 하나를 발견했습니다. 그들은 그것의 질량을 측정할 수 있었을 뿐만 아니라 그것의 궤도가 우리 태양계의 거대 행성과 유사하다는 것을 결정할 수 있었습니다.

AF Lep b라고 명명된 이 행성은 천문학이라는 기술을 사용하여 발견된 최초의 행성 중 하나입니다. 이 방법은 수년에 걸쳐 호스트 별의 미묘한 움직임을 측정하여 천문학자들이 행성을 포함하여 보기 어려운 궤도를 도는 동반자가 중력으로 끌어 당기고 있는지 여부를 결정하는 데 도움을 줍니다.

외계 행성 AF Lep b

목성과 비슷한 질량과 궤도를 가진 외계 행성인 AF Lep b의 Keck II 망원경으로 찍은 라이브 이미지. 출처: 텍사스 대학교 오스틴/WM Keck 천문대

텍사스 대학교 오스틴(UT Austin)의 천문학 대학원생 Kyle Franson이 주도한 이 연구는

“When we processed the observations using the Keck II telescope in real time to carefully remove the glare of the star, the planet immediately popped out and became increasingly apparent the longer we observed,” said Franson.

The direct images Franson’s team captured revealed that AF Lep b is about three times the mass of Jupiter and orbits AF Leporis, a young Sun-like star about 87.5 light-years away. They took a series of deep images of the planet starting in December 2021; two other teams also captured images of the same planet since then.

“This is the first time this method has been used to find a giant planet orbiting a young analog of the Sun,” said Brendan Bowler, an assistant professor of astronomy at UT Austin and senior author on the study. “This opens the door to using this approach as a new tool for exoplanet discovery.”

Movement of Extrasolar Planet AF Lep b

The movement of the extrasolar planet AF Lep b (white spot at about 10 o’clock) around its host star (center) can be seen in these two images taken in Dec. 2021 and Feb. 2023. Images were collected using the W. M. Keck Observatory’s 10-meter telescope in Hawaiʻi. Credit: Kyle Franson, University of Texas at Austin/W. M. Keck Observatory

Despite having a much smaller mass than its host star, an orbiting planet causes a star’s position to wobble slightly around the center of mass of the planetary system. Astrometry uses this shift in a star’s position on the sky relative to other stars to infer the existence of orbiting planets. Franson and Bowler identified the star AF Leporis as one that might harbor a planet, given the way it had moved during 25 years of observations from the Hipparcos and Gaia satellites.

To directly image the planet, the UT Austin team used Keck Observatory’s adaptive optics system, which corrects for fluctuations caused by turbulence in Earth’s atmosphere, paired with the Keck II Telescope’s Near-Infrared Camera 2 (NIRC2) Vector Vortex Coronagraph, which suppresses light from the host star so the planet could be seen more clearly. AF Lep b is about 10,000 times fainter than its host star and is located about 8 times the Earth-Sun distance.

Masses and Orbital Distances of All Extrasolar Planets

This chart shows the masses and orbital distances of all the extrasolar planets that have been directly imaged so far. Astronomers have confirmed the masses of five (marked with stars) and estimated the rest (dots). The newly imaged planet, AF Lep b (yellow star), has a mass and orbit that make it one of the most Jupiter-like extrasolar planets imaged so far. Credit: Brendan Bowler, University of Texas at Austin

“Imaging planets is challenging,” Franson said. “We only have about 15 examples, and we think this new ‘dynamically informed’ approach made possible by the Keck II telescope and NIRC2 adaptive optics imaging will be much more efficient compared to blind surveys which have been carried out for the past two decades.”

The two most common ways of finding extrasolar planets involve observing slight, periodic dimming of the starlight if a planet happens to regularly pass in front of the star— like a moth spiraling around a porch light — and measuring minute changes in the frequencies of starlight that result from the planet tugging the star back and forth along the direction to Earth. Both methods tend to work best with large planets orbiting close to their host stars, and both methods are indirect: we don’t see the planet, we only see how it influences the star.

The method of combining direct imaging with astrometry could help astronomers find extrasolar planets that were hard to find before with other methods because they were too far from their host star, were too low mass, or didn’t have orbits that were edge-on as seen from Earth. Another benefit of this technique is that it allows astronomers to directly measure a planet’s mass, which is difficult with other methods at wide orbital distances.

Bowler said the team plans to continue studying AF Lep b.

“This will be an excellent target to further characterize with the James Webb Space Telescope and the next generation of large ground-based telescopes like the Giant Magellan Telescope and the Thirty Meter Telescope,” Bowler said. “We’re already planning more sensitive follow-up efforts at longer wavelengths to study the physical properties and atmospheric chemistry of this planet.”

Reference: “Astrometric Accelerations as Dynamical Beacons: A Giant Planet Imaged inside the Debris Disk of the Young Star AF Lep” by Kyle Franson, Brendan P. Bowler, Yifan Zhou, Tim D. Pearce, Daniella C. Bardalez Gagliuffi, Lauren I. Biddle, Timothy D. Brandt, Justin R. Crepp, Trent J. Dupuy, Jacqueline Faherty, Rebecca Jensen-Clem, Marvin Morgan, Aniket Sanghi, Christopher A. Theissen, Quang H. Tran and Trevor N. Wolf, 22 June 2023, Astrophysical Journal Letters.
DOI: 10.3847/2041-8213/acd6f6

NASA Keck time is administered by the NASA Exoplanet Science Institute. Data presented herein were obtained at the W. M. Keck Observatory from telescope time allocated to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration through the agency’s scientific partnership with the California Institute of Technology and the University of California.

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