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Caught in the act? Images may reveal planetary birth.


They might be planets.

Peering into disks of gas and dust that surround young stars, two teams of astronomers have for the first time imaged dusty clumps that could be planets in the making.

Material within the disks, ubiquitous around newborn stars, can coalesce co·a·lesce  
intr.v. co·a·lesced, co·a·lesc·ing, co·a·lesc·es
1. To grow together; fuse.

2. To come together so as to form one whole; unite:
 into planets. It's uncertain whether the faint clumps seen in the new images are planets, heavier objects known as brown dwarfs The first free-floating brown dwarf discovered is Teide 1 in 1995. The first brown dwarf discovered that orbits a star is Gliese 229B, also discovered in 1995. The first brown dwarf to have a planet is 2M1207, discovered in 2004. , or just background objects that happen to lie in the same patch of sky.

The glare of starlight makes it difficult to study the faint light from disks. One team, led by Ben Oppenheimer of the American Museum of Natural History American Museum of Natural History, incorporated in New York City in 1869 to promote the study of natural science and related subjects. Buildings on its present site were opened in 1877.  in New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
, used a U.S. Air Force telescope in Maui, Hawaii, to examine a disk surrounding the young star AB Aurigae, some 460 light-years from Earth. A telescope mask blocked the bright light from the parent star, and a polarizing filter further suppressed that light. Also, a mirror on the telescope rapidly flexed to remove the twinkling caused by Earth's turbulent atmosphere.

Infrared images show a gap in the disk, along with what appears to be a barely discernible point of light at the center of this hole. The researchers suggest that the point represents a place where gas and dust has begun to gather into a small body--either a planet or a brown dwarf--and has cleared the area around it. "We may be witnessing such a process for the first time," the astronomers will report in the June 10 Astrophysical Journal.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The body lies about 2.5 times farther from the star than Pluto's average distance from the sun and is presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 the same age as AB Aurigae, a youthful 1 million to 3 million years old. It has a mass between 5 and 37 times that of Jupiter, Oppenheimer adds.

Another team, taking advantage of a rare chance to use the Very Large Array of radio telescopes near Socorro, N.M., in conjunction with another radio telescope 50 kilometers distant, examined the disk around the star HL Tau. The star, about 520 light-years from Earth, is only about 100,000 years old. Jane Greaves greaves

cracklings, an edible raw fat from the meat trade. The skimmings from the preparation of this fat are also called greaves. They represent a low grade of meat meal.
 of the University of St Andrews "St Andrew's University" redirects here. For the private university in Argentina, see Universidad de San Andrés. For the private university in Japan, see Momoyama Gakuin University.  in Scotland and her colleagues observed radio emissions that indicate the disk hosts pebble-sized rocks--a clue that some material has begun to coalesce into planets.

Greaves also spied an enormous clump of gas and dust "which is exactly how a very young protoplanet should look,' she says. The clump has a diameter about five times the distance between Jupiter and the sun. "We are seeing [this object] at an incredibly early stage," Greaves says.

The candidate protoplanet is about 14 times Jupiter's mass and lies about twice as far from HL Tan as Neptune does from the sun, Greaves announced this week in Belfast at the Royal Astronomical Society This article is about the British Society. For the Canadian Society, see Royal Astronomical Society of Canada.

The Royal Astronomical Society (RAS) is a learned society that began as the Astronomical Society of London in 1820 to support astronomical
 National Astronomy Meeting.

Alan Boss of the Carnegie Institution of Washington The introduction to this article may be too long. Please help improve the introduction by moving some material from it into the body of the article according to the suggestions at  (D.C.) says the two new discoveries are "equally exciting, equally promising, and equally dubious. The safest course of action right now is to call both of these clumps candidate protoplanets or candidate brown dwarfs."

Next year, Greaves' team plans to observe the protoplanet with an upgraded array of radio telescopes in the United Kingdom.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Cowen, Ron
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:4EUUK
Date:Apr 5, 2008
Words:538
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