Friday, February 27, 2026
14.4 C
Srinagar

NASA to study two ‘Super-Earths’ 50 light years away

Washington, June 2 :NASA has said that it will be studying two hot exoplanets classified as “super-Earths” that is situated 50 light years away and among them is planet ’55 Cancri e’, which is sort of like Earth but closer to star.


According to NASA, among the investigations planned for the first year are studies of two hot exoplanets classified as “super-Earths” for their size and rocky composition: the lava-covered 55 Cancri e and the airless LHS 3844 b.
The researchers will train James Webb Space Telescope’s high-precision spectrographs on these planets with a view to understanding the geologic diversity of planets across the galaxy, and the evolution of rocky planets like Earth.
55 Cancri e orbits less than 1.5 million miles from its Sun-like star (one twenty-fifth of the distance between Mercury and the Sun), completing one circuit in less than 18 hours. With surface temperatures far above the melting point of typical rock-forming minerals, the day side of the planet is thought to be covered in oceans of lava.
While it is considered that the hottest spot on the planet orbiting this close to their star would be the one facing the star at all times, the observations of 55 Cancri e from NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope have suggested that the hottest region is offset from the part that faces the star most directly and the total amount of heat detected from the day side does vary.
“55 Cancri e could have a thick atmosphere dominated by oxygen or nitrogen. If it has an atmosphere, (Webb) has the sensitivity and wavelength range to detect it and determine what it is made of,” said Renyu Hu of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. He leads a team that will use Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) and Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) to capture the thermal emission spectrum of the day side of the planet.
Another intriguing possibility, however, is that 55 Cancri e is not tidally locked as it is rotating three times for every two orbits. As a result, the planet would have a day-night cycle.
Alexis Brandeker, a researcher from Stockholm University who leads another team studying the planet, said: “That could explain why the hottest part of the planet is shifted. Just like on Earth, it would take time for the surface to heat up. The hottest time of the day would be in the afternoon, not right at noon.”

Hot this week

Driver Killed, One Injured as Chicken-Laden Truck Falls into Gorge in Ramban

Ramban, Feb 27,: A truck driver lost his life...

Mughal Road Reopens for Traffic, LMVs Ply Smoothly

Shopian, Feb 27,: The historic Mughal Road was reopened...

Pakistan Drone Sighting on LoC, Army Fires to Counter Intrusion

Poonch, Feb 27,: Indian Army troops in the forward...

India win big to set up knockout against West Indies

India's batting muscle powered them to 256, and despite...

Pakistan and Afghanistan Face Off as Border Clashes and Airstrikes Push Region to Brink of War

Asian Mail News DeskTensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan escalated...

Topics

Mughal Road Reopens for Traffic, LMVs Ply Smoothly

Shopian, Feb 27,: The historic Mughal Road was reopened...

Pakistan Drone Sighting on LoC, Army Fires to Counter Intrusion

Poonch, Feb 27,: Indian Army troops in the forward...

India win big to set up knockout against West Indies

India's batting muscle powered them to 256, and despite...

Pakistan and Afghanistan Face Off as Border Clashes and Airstrikes Push Region to Brink of War

Asian Mail News DeskTensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan escalated...

Character, discipline key to success: VP Radhakrishnan at KU convocation

Srinagar, Feb 26: Vice President C P Radhakrishnan on...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img