Astronomers could soon be able to find rocky planets stretched out by the gravity of the stars they orbit, according to a group of researchers in the United States. The team describes how to detect these exotic worlds in a paper in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
Prabal and his team modelled cases where the planets are in orbit close to small red dwarf stars, much fainter than our Sun, but by far the most common type of star in the Galaxy. The planets' rotation is locked, so the worlds keep the same face towards the stars they orbit, much like the Moon does as it moves around the Earth. According to the scientists, in these circumstances the distortion of the planets should be detectable in transit events, where the planets moves in front of their stars and blocks out some of their light. The image above is an artist’s impression of a stretched rocky planet in orbit around a red dwarf star. So close to the star, there is a difference in the strength of the gravitational field on each side of the planet, stretching it significantly.
If astronomers are able to find these extreme exoplanets, it could give them new insights into the properties of Earth-like planets as a whole. "Imagine taking a planet like the Earth or Mars, placing it near a cool red star and stretching it out," says team leader, Prabal Saxena of George Mason University. "Analysing the new shape alone will tell us a lot about the otherwise impossible to see internal structure of the planet and how it changes over time."
The subtle signals from stretched rocky planets could be found by some current telescopes, and certainly by much more powerful observatories like the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) and the European Extremely Large Telescope (E-ELT) that are due to enter service in the next few years.
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