• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Vega Has A Disk Of Material Around It – And It Is Shockingly Smooth

November 4, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

In the 1997 movie Contact, Dr Ellie Arroway, played by the excellent Jodie Foster, travels via a wormhole past Vega, showing a system with no planets but lots of debris. Hollywood might have gotten that completely right – it seems that Vega is not building any planets like other stars.

The star is one of the brightest in the Northern Hemisphere. It was for a time, and will be again, the North Star, once the pole has precessed away from Polaris. It is more than twice as massive as the Sun but it is a lot younger, around 500 million years old. It is so young, in fact, that it is still surrounded by a disk of material known as a protoplanetary disk. That’s where planets form. At least, usually.

Advertisement

It seems that Vega is not a planet-producing machine. Other protoplanetary disks feature dark bands where planets are forming. The fledgling planets act like a snowplow, sweeping dust and gas in their orbit. The Vega disk stretches for 160 billion kilometers (100 million miles) and it is as smooth as you can get, bar a possible gap far from the star.

“It’s a mysterious system because it’s unlike other circumstellar disks we’ve looked at,” Andras Gáspár of the University of Arizona, a member of the research team, said in a statement. “The Vega disk is smooth, ridiculously smooth.”

“It’s making us rethink the range and variety among exoplanet systems,” added lead author Kate Su, also from the University of Arizona.

It took the combined power of Hubble and JWST to understand exactly how the material in this disk is distributed. The starlight from Vega has pushed away all the smoke-sized particles seen by Hubble further away, while JWST sees the dust grains as fine as sand, closer to the famous star.

Advertisement

“Different types of physics will locate different-sized particles at different locations,” explained Schuyler Wolff of the University of Arizona team, lead author of the paper presenting the Hubble findings. “The fact that we’re seeing dust particle sizes sorted out can help us understand the underlying dynamics in circumstellar disks.”

There is a subtle signal at 60 astronomical units from the star – that’s about twice as far as Neptune is from the Sun. It is likely a gap, potentially indicating one singular baby planet. If it is the case, we are witnessing a peculiar system with no planets forming anywhere close to the star.  

“We’re seeing in detail how much variety there is among circumstellar disks, and how that variety is tied into the underlying planetary systems. We’re finding a lot out about the planetary systems – even when we can’t see what might be hidden planets,” added Su. “There’s still a lot of unknowns in the planet-formation process, and I think these new observations of Vega are going to help constrain models of planet formation.”

The disk is particularly striking when compared to another star called Fomalhaut. It’s at the same age, temperature, and distance (25 light-years) as Vega, but JWST has shown the hallmarks of planet-building around Fomalhaut. Why is Vega different? This remains a major open question that will require further studies.

Advertisement

Two papers describing the results will be published in The Astrophysical Journal, and are available here and here.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Canadians rush to early polls in election, mail-in ballots underwhelm
  2. One Identity has acquired OneLogin, a rival to Okta and Ping in sign-on and identity access management
  3. “Starquakes” On Neutron Stars Could Be Source Of Mysterious Fast Radio Bursts
  4. The Smallest Mammal In The World Lived 53 Million Years Ago

Source Link: Vega Has A Disk Of Material Around It – And It Is Shockingly Smooth

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • There Used To Be 27 Letters In The English Alphabet, Until One Mysteriously Vanished
  • Why You Need To Stop Chucking That “Liquid Gold” Down Your Kitchen Sink
  • Youngest Mammoth Fossils Ever Found Turn Out To Be Whales… 400 Kilometers From The Coast
  • The First Wheelchair User To Travel To Space Is About To Make History
  • “It Was Bigger Than A Killer Whale”: 66 Million-Year-Old Tooth Suggests Mosasaurs Were Hunting In Rivers, Not Just Seas
  • Killer Whales And Dolphins Team Up In First-Ever Footage Of Cooperative Hunting
  • Why Does Chocolate In Advent Calendars Taste Different From Normal Chocolate?
  • Why Do Sheep And Goats Have Rectangular Pupils?
  • What Kind Of Parents Were Dinosaurs?
  • First Images Of A Tatooine-Like Planet That Orbits Its Two Stars Closer Than We’ve Seen Before
  • JWST Finds Earliest Supernova Yet, From When The Universe Was Just 730 Million Years Old
  • How A Comet On Christmas Day Changed What We Knew About Space
  • What Color Was Diplodocus? First-Ever Sauropod Fossils With Melanosomes Bring Us A Step Closer To Finding Out
  • Why Do NASA’s Voyager Spacecraft Sometimes Get Closer To Earth, As They Head Out Of The Solar System?
  • What Is The Fastest Animal In The World?
  • Would The Burglars Have Survived “Home Alone”? We Asked An Intensive Care Doctor
  • World’s First-Ever Dictionary Of Ancient Celtic Languages Set To Be Created
  • Fresh From Capturing Image Of 3I/ATLAS, NASA’s MAVEN Suffers “Anomaly” And Is No Longer Communicating With Earth
  • Thought “Superflu” Was Bad? Strap In: It’s Norovirus Season In The US
  • Why Does Evolution Turn Everything Into Crabs?
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version