For the first time, an international group of astronomers have seen the heat glow of two ice giant planets colliding, and the resultant dust cloud then move in front of the parent star several years later. The star ASASSN-21qj—named after the network of telescopes that first detected the fading of the star at visible wavelengths—was then studied intensively by a network of amateur and professional astronomers including Dr. Matthew Kenworthy at Leiden Observatory (the Netherlands), who monitored the changes in the star’s brightness over the next two years.
The study, “A planetary collision afterglow and transit of the resultant debris cloud,” has been published in Nature.
A chance post on a social media site from an amateur researcher led to the discovery that the system doubled in brightness at infrared wavelengths some three years before the star started to fade in visible light. “To be honest, this was a complete surprise to me,” says Dr. Kenworthy.
“When the ASASSN survey shared the light curve of this star with other astronomers, I started watching it with a network of telescopes and observers. Out of the blue, an astronomer on social media pointed out that the star brightened up in the infrared over a thousand days before the optical fading. I knew then that this was an unusual event.”
Leiden graduate student Richelle van Capelleveen (who did the work as a master’s student) continues, “I worked on the light curve with Dr. Kenworthy and during our work, we realized that this could be a collision of two planets.”
The most likely explanation is that two ice giant exoplanets collided together, producing the infrared glow picked up by the NEOWISE mission, and the resultant expanding debris cloud then moved in front of the star some three years later and caused the star to dim in brightness at visible wavelengths.
Planetary collision
“The temperature and size of the glowing material and the amount of time the glow has lasted is consistent with the collision of two ice giant exoplanets, as we infer from our calculations and computer models,” says co-author Dr. Simon Lock (University of Bristol, United Kingdom).
“What’s new is that we think this is the first time we see the glow from the body that is produced by the planetary collision,” says Dr. Grant Kennedy (University of Warwick, United Kingdom), also a co-author on the paper.
“This is really a fantastic opportunity to find out about the interior of giant planets,” says Dr. Ludmila Carone from the Space Research Institute of the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Graz.
Normally, giant planets hide their heavy elements under thick layers of hydrogen and helium. In this collision, however, material from the interior was ejected or dredged up into the outer regions of the body created by the merger of the two planets. Carone adds, “We can already conclude that a lot of water vapor was released that helped to cool the post-impact body down to 1000 K.”
Smear out
Over the next few years, the cloud of dust will start to smear out along the orbit of the collision remnant, and a tell-tale scattering of light from this cloud can be detected with both ground-based telescopes and the James Webb Space Telescope. Astronomers will watch closely what happens next in this system.
Ultimately, the cloud of material around the remnant may condense to form a retinue of moons that will orbit around this new planet.
More information:
Matthew Kenworthy, A planetary collision afterglow and transit of the resultant debris cloud, Nature (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06573-9. www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-06573-9
Provided by
Netherlands Research School for Astronomy
Citation:
Dust cloud from two colliding ice planets dims light of parent star (2023, October 11)