The Prague Post - 'Like a mirror': Astronomers identify most reflective exoplanet

EUR -
AED 4.304898
AFN 72.675868
ALL 95.499538
AMD 435.199752
ANG 2.098101
AOA 1076.078471
ARS 1660.420587
AUD 1.631468
AWG 2.112889
AZN 1.993889
BAM 1.955799
BBD 2.365789
BDT 144.509918
BGN 1.955348
BHD 0.442296
BIF 3490.968229
BMD 1.172199
BND 1.495486
BOB 8.116995
BRL 5.862753
BSD 1.174594
BTN 110.578465
BWP 15.814924
BYN 3.298784
BYR 22975.106906
BZD 2.364789
CAD 1.597532
CDF 2725.363226
CHF 0.92053
CLF 0.026647
CLP 1048.775764
CNY 7.998092
CNH 8.001878
COP 4245.155047
CRC 533.697419
CUC 1.172199
CUP 31.063282
CVE 110.264937
CZK 24.357252
DJF 209.168989
DKK 7.472648
DOP 69.829662
DZD 155.246027
EGP 61.579619
ERN 17.58299
ETB 183.407313
FJD 2.572919
FKP 0.868445
GBP 0.865886
GEL 3.141591
GGP 0.868445
GHS 13.031993
GIP 0.868445
GMD 85.570299
GNF 10308.90618
GTQ 8.979995
GYD 245.74986
HKD 9.187054
HNL 31.216849
HRK 7.532435
HTG 153.7886
HUF 364.295896
IDR 20188.789094
ILS 3.487821
IMP 0.868445
INR 110.500828
IQD 1538.799123
IRR 1541442.121547
ISK 143.407091
JEP 0.868445
JMD 185.429103
JOD 0.8311
JPY 186.81688
KES 151.699914
KGS 102.486205
KHR 4700.957217
KMF 492.323585
KPW 1054.979393
KRW 1728.295295
KWD 0.360721
KYD 0.978899
KZT 538.149693
LAK 25723.914193
LBP 104970.44996
LKR 373.829787
LRD 215.538176
LSL 19.358106
LTL 3.4612
LVL 0.709051
LYD 7.450964
MAD 10.854194
MDL 20.332902
MGA 4881.976394
MKD 61.637078
MMK 2461.528335
MNT 4192.360035
MOP 9.482095
MRU 46.902773
MUR 54.753628
MVR 18.110158
MWK 2036.790151
MXN 20.375641
MYR 4.63312
MZN 74.915307
NAD 19.358189
NGN 1593.698516
NIO 43.229607
NOK 10.893715
NPR 176.925144
NZD 1.982746
OMR 0.450692
PAB 1.174599
PEN 4.095898
PGK 5.100954
PHP 71.287287
PKR 327.395817
PLN 4.250923
PYG 7399.964218
QAR 4.293798
RON 5.091326
RSD 117.402787
RUB 87.76675
RWF 1721.391676
SAR 4.396327
SBD 9.430704
SCR 16.024854
SDG 703.910241
SEK 10.808824
SGD 1.493971
SHP 0.875165
SLE 28.865392
SLL 24580.429397
SOS 671.296754
SRD 43.799246
STD 24262.15951
STN 24.499777
SVC 10.277994
SYP 129.557309
SZL 19.341906
THB 37.909307
TJS 11.032694
TMT 4.108559
TND 3.417298
TOP 2.822375
TRY 52.799604
TTD 7.975995
TWD 36.890285
TZS 3049.32776
UAH 51.80345
UGX 4369.997509
USD 1.172199
UYU 46.719973
UZS 14181.387013
VES 566.365292
VND 30898.00219
VUV 138.541707
WST 3.198354
XAF 655.953828
XAG 0.015523
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.167927
XCG 2.116999
XDR 0.815796
XOF 655.953828
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.745864
ZAR 19.349538
ZMK 10551.201193
ZMW 22.229893
ZWL 377.447707
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    64.94

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0900

    22.86

    -0.39%

  • BCC

    -0.2900

    83.86

    -0.35%

  • NGG

    -0.1900

    87.23

    -0.22%

  • BCE

    -0.3200

    23.56

    -1.36%

  • RELX

    -0.1400

    36.39

    -0.38%

  • RIO

    0.3400

    99.95

    +0.34%

  • GSK

    -0.2200

    54.22

    -0.41%

  • AZN

    -2.2400

    187.51

    -1.19%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    23.26

    -0.26%

  • RYCEF

    0.0500

    15.4

    +0.32%

  • JRI

    -0.0600

    12.83

    -0.47%

  • BTI

    -0.7700

    57.32

    -1.34%

  • BP

    -0.2800

    45.97

    -0.61%

  • VOD

    -0.1200

    15.51

    -0.77%

'Like a mirror': Astronomers identify most reflective exoplanet
'Like a mirror': Astronomers identify most reflective exoplanet / Photo: Handout - EUROPEAN SPACE AGENCY/AFP

'Like a mirror': Astronomers identify most reflective exoplanet

A scorching hot world where metal clouds rain drops of titanium is the most reflective planet ever observed outside of our Solar System, astronomers said on Monday.

Text size:

This strange world, which is more than 260 light years from Earth, reflects 80 percent of the light from its host star, according to new observations from Europe's exoplanet-probing Cheops space telescope.

That makes it the first exoplanet comparably shiny as Venus, which is the brightest object in our night sky other than the Moon.

First discovered in 2020, the Neptune-sized planet called LTT9779b orbits its star in just 19 hours.

Because it is so close, the side of the planet facing its star is a sizzling 2,000 degrees Celsius, which is considered far too hot for clouds to form.

Yet LTT9779b seems to have them.

"It was really a puzzle," said Vivien Parmentier, a researcher at France's Cote d'Azur Observatory and co-author of a new study in the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics.

The researchers then "realised we should think about this cloud formation in the same way as condensation forming in a bathroom after a hot shower," he said in a statement.

Like running hot water steams up a bathroom, a scorching stream of metal and silicate -- the stuff of which glass is made -- oversaturated LTT9779b's atmosphere until metallic clouds formed, he said.

- Surviving 'Neptune desert' -

The planet, which is around five times the size of Earth, is an outlier in other ways.

The only exoplanets previously found that orbit their stars in less than 24 hours are either gas giants 10 times bigger than Earth -- or rocky planets half its size.

But LTT9779b lives in a region called the "Neptune desert", where planets its size are not supposed to be found.

"It's a planet that shouldn't exist," Parmentier said.

"We expect planets like this to have their atmosphere blown away by their star, leaving behind bare rock."

The planet's metallic clouds "act like a mirror," reflecting away light and preventing the atmosphere from being blown away, according to the European Space Agency's Cheops project scientist Maximilian Guenther.

"It's a bit like a shield, like in those old Star Trek films where they have shields around their ships," he told AFP.

The research marks "a big milestone" because it shows how a Neptune-sized planet could survive in the Neptune desert, he added.

The European Space Agency's Cheops space telescope was launched into Earth's orbit in 2019 on a mission to investigate planets discovered outside our Solar System.

It measured the reflectiveness of LTT9779b by comparing the light before and after the exoplanet disappeared behind its star.

K.Pokorny--TPP