There are thousands of confirmed exoplanets in the cosmos, and many of them are members of solar systems very
different than our own. As missions like Kepler and the Transiting
Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) have highlighted more distant worlds,
astronomers have been surprised how many of them have so-called “hot
Jupiters.” WASP-121b is the hottest of these close-orbiting gas giants.
How hot is it? It’s so hot that heavy metals leak out as it rockets
around the star. WASP-121b made headlines in 2017 when scientists used Hubble to characterize its stratosphere.That was a first for any exoplanet, and it showed that the planet’s
temperature increases along with the altitude, just like planets in our
solar system. This is a hot Jupiter with 1.2 times the mass of Jupiter
itself. It orbits a star about 900 light-years away that’s slightly
larger and warmer than the sun, but it’s so close that its year is only
30 Earth days long. Even
by the standards of a hot Jupiter, WASP-121b is absolutely scorching.
At 4,600 degrees Fahrenheit (2,500 Celsius), it’s 10 times hotter than
any other exoplanet yet discovered. While it’s only a little more
massive than Jupiter, it’s diameter is almost twice as large because the
intense heat from WASP-121 has caused it to swell. The new Hubble
observations demonstrate what that intense heat means for the planet. The
fluffed up outer layers of WASP-121b are under less gravity than the
inner layers, so they fall away from the planet as it orbits. In most
gas giants — even hot Jupiters — that would be largely hydrogen and
helium. However, Hubble indicates that WASP-121b is losing heavy metals
like magnesium and iron. Astronomers hypothesize the incredible heat is
enough to lift heavy metals from the lower layers of the atmosphere
upward where they can be lost to space.
WASP-121b
is too far away to image the atmosphere or trailing metallic gas
directly, but Hubble can track the planet as it transits in front of its
host star. The changes in light allow them to determine what’s
happening to the exoplanet’s atmosphere via spectroscopy. Perhaps the
most interesting aspect of the new analysis is what the hellish heat is
doing to the planet’s shape. So much of the atmosphere is being pulled
away that the planet probably looks a bit like a football. Scientists
hope to learn more about this extreme planet in the future. The
upcoming James Webb Space Telescope should be able to characterize its
atmosphere even more accurately.
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