Imagine a planet with triple sunrises and sunsets every day for part of the year, and nonstop daylight at other times.
Astronomers revealed such a place on Thursday: a strange new world in the constellation Centaurus that has not one, not two, but three suns. What is more, a year there lasts half a millennium from Earth’s perspective.
Discoverer and lead author Kevin Wagner said he is thrilled “to have seen such a beautiful part of nature that nobody else has seen.”
Photo: EPA / L. Calcada / ESO / Handout
As amazing as three sunsets and sunrises are, “I think nature will have some other surprises in store for us as we continue exploring,” Wagner, a doctoral student at the University of Arizona at Tucson, said via e-mail.
Triple-star systems with detected planets are rare enough; this is believed to be just the fifth such discovery. However, the giant gassy world in this one — formally known as planet HD 131399Ab — has the biggest known orbit in a multistar system.
Its orbit is double Pluto’s — or about 550 Earth years. That is how long it takes to orbit its system’s brightest star, a super-sized sun. The two smaller stars orbit one another and, as a pair, orbit with their big stellar brother.
Planet HD 131399Ab has four times the mass of Jupiter. With such a wide orbit and companion stars, scientists would expect a planet like this to be kicked out in a tug of stellar war. Yet that is not the case.
During part of the planet’s orbit, all three stars are visible on the same day, offering triple sunrises and sunsets, and allowing for day and night. For about one-quarter of its year — between 100 and 140 Earth years — there is continuous daylight. That is because as the big sun is rising, the two smaller ones are setting.
“With three suns, the planet will see different weird combinations of sunrises and sunsets,” said co-author Daniel Apai, a University of Arizona astronomer. “This is a system for which I would not want to design a calendar.”
The astronomers used the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope in Chile to spot the planet 320 light-years away. It is one of the few exoplanets — planets outside our own solar system — to be directly imaged. Most exoplanets are identified by periodic dips in starlight as the planets pass between us and their stars.
The team reported the discovery on Thursday in the journal Science.
As for the planet’s alphabet-soup label, “I wish we had a better name,” Wagner said.
There is an official protocol for naming planets and their surface features.
The International Astronomical Union has a relatively new group to handle public naming campaigns.
“Informally, we called it ‘The Planet,’ but with more possible planet candidates in sight, we will have to change this soon,” Apai said in an e-mail.
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