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Nasa’s James Webb telescope finds Earth-like exoplanet has no atmosphere


This is the first detection of any form of light emitted by an exoplanet (Picture: Nasa)

Nasa’s James Webb Space Telescope has allowed scientists to measure the temperature of a rocky exoplanet and found that it has no atmosphere.

The planet called TRAPPIST-1 b, is one of the seven rocky, Earth-sized planets orbiting a nearby star.

Webb’s Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) was able to measure the planet’s heat energy given off in the form of infrared light to determine that it gets as hot as 500 kelvins (roughly 450 degrees Fahrenheit).

‘This is the first detection of any form of light emitted by an exoplanet as small and as cool as the rocky planets in our own solar system,’ said Nasa in a statement.

‘The result marks an important step in determining whether planets orbiting small active stars like TRAPPIST-1 can sustain atmospheres needed to support life. It also bodes well for Webb’s ability to characterize temperate, Earth-sized exoplanets using MIRI.’

‘These observations really take advantage of Webb’s mid-infrared capability,’ said Thomas Greene, lead author on the study published in the journal Nature. ‘No previous telescopes have had the sensitivity to measure such dim mid-infrared light.’

In early 2017, astronomers reported the discovery of seven rocky planets orbiting an ultracool red dwarf star (or M dwarf) 40 light-years from Earth.

The planet called TRAPPIST-1 b, is one of the seven rocky, Earth-sized planets orbiting a nearby star (Picture: Nasa)

What is remarkable about the planets is their similarity in size and mass to the inner, rocky planets of our own solar system. Although they all orbit much closer to their star than any of our planets orbit the Sun, they receive comparable amounts of energy from their tiny star.

TRAPPIST-1 b, the innermost planet, has an orbital distance about one hundredth that of Earth’s and receives about four times the amount of energy that Earth gets from the Sun.

Although it is not within the system’s habitable zone, observations of the planet can provide important information about its sibling planets, as well as those of other M-dwarf systems. 

‘There are ten times as many of these stars in the Milky Way as there are stars like the Sun, and they are twice as likely to have rocky planets as stars like the Sun,’ explained Greene.

‘But they are also very active ­– they are very bright when they’re young, and they give off flares and X-rays that can wipe out an atmosphere.’


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