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GJ1214b

February 22, 2012 by · Comments Off on GJ1214b 

GJ1214b, GJ 1214b: A Steam-Bath World: As the census of known extrasolar planets grows, so too does the variety of species in the Cosmic Planetary Zoo. There are “hot Jupiters,” “super Earths,” lava-covered orbs, and who knows what else — all being chased down at once. It’s hard enough for professional astronomers to keep track of them all, let alone we interested bystanders.

GJ 1214b, shown in this artist’s conception, is a super-Earth orbiting a red-dwarf star 40 light-years from Earth. Observations suggest that its atmosphere is mostly water.
David A. Aguilar / CfAOne exoplanet that’s attracted a lot of attention since its discovery in 2009 is GJ 1214b. It circles a dim red dwarf that’s just 40 light-years away in Ophiuchus, which makes this a fairly easy system to study. The planet is a “super-Earth”, 2.7 times the size of ours, while the host star is only a fifth the size of our Sun and just 0.3% as luminous. The two are very close together, just 1.3 million miles (2.1 million km) apart, suggesting that the planet’s surface temperature is hot but not outrageously so — probably within a couple hundred degrees of boiling water.

What makes astronomers so interested in GJ 1214b is not so much its size or proximity to us but rather its density, just 1.87 g/cm3. That’s too low for it to be rocky throughout and too high to be a gas giant — but a water-rock mixture would be a good fit. In fact, follow-up spectroscopic studies with the Very Large Telescope imply that the planet’s toasty-hot atmosphere is most likely dominated by water.

Now GJ 1214b is in the news again, thanks to near-infrared spectra collected by the Hubble Space Telescope’s Wide-Field Camera 3. (WFC3 isn’t a spectrometer per se, but its infrared channel has 15 different filters spaced between 1.1 and 1.7 microns.) A team led by Zachory Berta (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics) monitored three transits of the planet across the face of its host star, then carefully derived an absorption spectrum for GJ 1214b’s atmosphere.

This is the first time that WFC3 has been used to monitor a transiting exoplanet, and the observers had to be alert to a few minor problems with both the instrument and the target. For example, the star itself is so cool and dim that it exhibits weak spectral features due to water molecules. Their article is set to appear in Astrophysical Journal.

Working through these issues, Berta and his team conclude that the planet’s flat infrared spectrum could not possibly be matched by a purely hydrogen atmosphere or by a hydrogen-methane mix, which had been two earlier suggestions. Nor is it likely due to a planetwide cloak of opaque clouds, which could mimic the observed spectrum but seems chemically implausible.

Instead, the new observations reinforce the notion that GJ 1214b’s atmosphere contains at least 50% water by mass. This, in turn, suggests that the planet’s large size and modest density are due to large amounts of water in its interior, as opposed to a rocky world surrounded by a puffed-up blanket of hydrogen and helium. And that, in turn, suggests that the planet might have formed farther out, beyond the star’s “snow line,” and then migrated inward to where it is now.

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