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Webb Telescope Images New Planet — What It Means For Earth 2.0 Search

Webb Telescope Images New Planet — What It Means For Earth 2.0 Search

Forbes4 days ago

In a landmark achievement, the James Webb Space Telescope has directly imaged its first new exoplanet. About the same mass as Saturn, it was found in a star system about 111 light-years distant. It's the lightest planet even directly imaged and could make it easier for astronomers to find Earth-like planets in other star systems.
Image of the disk around the star TWA 7 recorded using ESO's Very Large Telescope's SPHERE ... More instrument, with image captured with JWST's MIRI instrument overlayed. A.-M. Lagrange and al. - Evidence for a sub-jovian planet in the young TWA7 disk, 2025
Dubbed TWA 7b, the exoplanet — defined as a planet that orbits a star other than the sun — was found in a disk of debris (which scientists call a protoplanetary disk) around a star called TWA 7. The planet is 10 times lighter than those previously captured in images.
TWA 7 is a small red dwarf star just 111 light-years from the solar system in the Southern Hemisphere constellation Antlia. It has long been known to have three rings around it that could have planets forming within them.
It's the first confirmed detection of a planet embedded in a debris disk using the Webb Telescope's Mid-Infrared Instrument, which provides far greater sensitivity than previous instruments.
It comes just a week after Webb's Near-Infrared Camera was used to directly image another cold exoplanet called 14 Herculis c. About seven times the mass of Jupiter, it was found 60 light-years from the solar system in the constellation Hercules.
TWA 7b was found using MIRI's coronagraph instrument, which places a disk over a star to block its light, creating an artificial eclipse that enables planets to show up around it. Exoplanets are typically found using the transit method, whereby astronomers record slight dips in the brightness of a distant star caused by a planet transiting across it. It's then possible to calculate the size of the planet, how far away it is from the star and study the starlight shining through the planet's atmosphere. If that method relies purely on a lucky line of sight, so does the discovery of TWA 7b. The TWA 7 star system is seen pole-on, an ideal vantage point that had allowed earlier observations to reveal its three-ring debris disk. Direct imaging, especially of low-mass planets, is notoriously difficult due to the overwhelming brightness of host stars. A paper about the discovery was published in Nature today by an international team of scientists.
In this 2020 image from the Gemini South telescope in Chile, the circumstellar disk around star TWA ... More 7 can be seen. International Gemini Observatory
At about a third of the mass of Jupiter — about the same as Saturn's, or about 100 times the mass of Earth — TWA 7b is the lowest-mass exoplanet ever directly imaged. It demonstrates JWST's power to detect much smaller and colder planets than previously possible using the MIRI instrument's coronagraph to directly image stars. Researchers believe that with continued use of advanced coronagraphs, even Earth-sized planets could one day be imaged directly. Efforts are already underway to identify the next most promising targets. Creating 'fake' Eclipses In Space
The European Space Agency last week published the first images of an artificial total solar eclipse created in Earth orbit by its Proba-3 mission. It features two satellites that fly in formation 492 feet (150 meters) apart with millimeter precision, with one using a 1.4-meter-diameter disk that occults the sun, casting a shadow on another with a telescope and a coronagraph. Creating a total solar eclipse for six hours in every 19.6-hour orbit should allow scientists to study the sun's corona — its hotter outer atmosphere — which is only visible during a total solar eclipse. Forbes History Made As Webb Telescope Finds 44 Stars Near Big Bang — Here's How It Did It By Jamie Carter Forbes Webb Telescope Photographs 'Strange' Cold Planet Around Nearby Star By Jamie Carter Forbes In Photos: First Ever 'Fake' Total Solar Eclipse Created In Space By Jamie Carter

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Ex-NASA Chief Sounds Alarm Over Space Agency's Future
Ex-NASA Chief Sounds Alarm Over Space Agency's Future

Newsweek

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Ex-NASA Chief Sounds Alarm Over Space Agency's Future

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NASA satellite emits 'spark' decades after going dormant: Astronomers think they know why
NASA satellite emits 'spark' decades after going dormant: Astronomers think they know why

USA Today

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NASA satellite emits 'spark' decades after going dormant: Astronomers think they know why

Source of the radio waves was tracked to a location that matches that of NASA's defunct Relay 2 spacecraft, which launched in 1964 from Cape Canaveral, Florida. A NASA satellite that had been dead for nearly six decades issued a surprising sign of life. In June 2024, a team of astronomers were perplexed when a radio telescope in Australia scanning the sky over the southern hemisphere came across unusual radio waves. The burst of radiation was very bright, exceedingly quick – and much closer to Earth than the scientists would have thought. After studying the source of the strange cosmic phenomena, the researchers were even more mystified when it appeared to be originating from the same location as a NASA spacecraft that went offline about 58 years ago, according to a press release about the discovery released June 25, 2025. Don't be fooled, though: The defunct spacecraft that operated for about three years in the 1960s isn't kicking back on to resume operations anytime soon. So, what's going on? Here's what to know about the strange signal, and how astronomers tracked it to a defunct NASA satellite. What is NASA Relay 2 spacecraft? Astronomers tracked the source of the radio waves to a location that matches that of NASA's defunct Relay 2 spacecraft, a communications satellite that launched into orbit in 1964 from Cape Canaveral, Florida. The spacecraft operated until June 1967 after both of its onboard transponders failed. So, has the long-dead satellite has suddenly sprung back to life after nearly six decades? Astronomers say that's unlikely. Rather, the waves more likely came from a "spark" of built up electricity, which emitted a pulse as it jumped from one part of the spacecraft to another while passing through charged environment above Earth's atmosphere, according to the researchers. Strange signal originated in Milky Way The team of astronomers discovered the strange signal while hunting for bright, powerful flashes of electromagnetic radiation in the distant universe known as fast radio bursts. Most surprising to the researchers, all of whom are from the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, was that the signal spotted June 13, 2024, didn't originate from a far-flung galaxy. Instead, it originated in our own cosmic neighborhood in the Milky Way. While incredibly bright, the event only lasted less than 30 nanoseconds. The astronomers detected it using Australia's national science agency's (CSIRO) ASKAP radio telescope. Clancy James, an astrophysicist at Curtin University in Australia's Perth campus, then led a team that studied the extremely bright source of radio waves to determine its source. While the satellite signal is one possible explanation, the researchers have also theorized that an impact with a tiny particle of space debris, known as a "micrometeoroid," could have caused the anomaly. Such impacts can create short-lived clouds of hot, charged gas that produce bursts of radio waves. Electrostatic discharges could post threats in Earth's orbit The discovery marks the first time that a spark of built-up electricity has been observed to be both so bright and so short in duration. Now that the detection has been made, the finding not only demonstrates how astronomers can help identify the origin of these kinds of signals in the future, but could even help humanity better understand how electrostatic discharges can pose a danger to satellites in Earth's orbit. "Detections like this show how the tools developed to study the distant Universe can help scientists understand the increasingly crowded and critically important space environment close to Earth," the researcher said in a statement. The research has been accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Letters. A pre-print version of the paper is available on arXiv. Eric Lagatta is the Space Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Reach him at elagatta@

Rare Jupiter-sized planet discovered 3,200 light-years away using Einstein's space-time warping method
Rare Jupiter-sized planet discovered 3,200 light-years away using Einstein's space-time warping method

New York Post

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Rare Jupiter-sized planet discovered 3,200 light-years away using Einstein's space-time warping method

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