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Planet formation occurs around a wide range of stellar masses and stellar system architectures. An improved understanding of the formation process can be achieved by studying it across the full parameter space, particularly towards the extremes. Earlier studies of planets in close-in orbits around high-mass stars have revealed an increase in giant planet frequency with increasing stellar mass until a turnover point at 1.9 solar masses (M), above which the frequency rapidly decreases. This could potentially imply that planet formation is impeded around more massive stars, and that giant planets around stars exceeding 3 M may be rare or non-existent. However, the methods used to detect planets in small orbits are insensitive to planets in wide orbits. Here we demonstrate the existence of a planet at 560 times the Sun-Earth distance from the 6- to 10-M binary b Centauri through direct imaging. The planet-to-star mass ratio of 0.10-0.17% is similar to the Jupiter-Sun ratio, but the separation of the detected planet is about 100 times wider than that of Jupiter. Our results show that planets can reside in much more massive stellar systems than what would be expected from extrapolation of previous results. The planet is unlikely to have formed in situ through the conventional core accretion mechanism, but might have formed elsewhere and arrived to its present location through dynamical interactions, or might have formed via gravitational instability.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-04124-8 | DOI Listing |
Nature
September 2025
Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias, San Cristobal de La Laguna, Spain.
Within 20 pc of the Sun, there are currently 29 known cold brown dwarfs-sources with measured distances and an estimated effective temperature between that of Jupiter (170 K) and approximately 500 K (ref. ). These sources are almost all isolated and are the closest laboratories we have for detailed atmospheric studies of giant planets formed outside the Solar System.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Astron
July 2025
European Southern Observatory, Santiago, Chile.
The detection of planets in protoplanetary disks has proven to be extremely challenging. By contrast, rings and gaps, usually attributed to planet-disk interactions, have been found in virtually every large protoplanetary (Class II) disk observed at 0.9-1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Mol Sci
August 2025
NASA Ames Research Center, MS 245-6, Moffett Field, CA 94035, USA.
The formation and evolution of haze layers in planetary atmospheres play a critical role in shaping their chemical composition, radiative balance, and optical properties. In the outer solar system, the atmospheres of Titan and the giant planets exhibit a wide range of compositional and seasonal variability, creating environments favorable for the production of complex organic molecules under low-temperature conditions. Among them, Uranus-the smallest of the ice giants-has, since Voyager 2, emerged as a compelling target for future exploration due to unanswered questions regarding the composition and structure of its atmosphere, as well as its ring system and diverse icy moon population (which includes four possible ocean worlds).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNature
August 2025
Department of Physics, National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei, Taiwan.
Exoplanets are organized in a broad array of orbital configurations that reflect their formation along with billions of years of dynamical processing through gravitational interactions. This history is encoded in the angular momentum architecture of planetary systems-the relation between the rotational properties of the central star and the orbital geometry of planets. A primary observable is the alignment (or misalignment) between the rotational axis of the star and the orbital plane of its planets, known as stellar obliquity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFuture Healthc J
June 2025
Bite Back 2030, Fivefields, 8-10 Grosvenor Gardens, London SW1W 0DH, UK.
Multinational conglomerates and other major food corporations dominate food options in the UK. At Bite Back, a youth-led movement, we have extensively documented the ways in which big food businesses target children as part of their market monopoly. These businesses employ tactics such as misleading health claims, advertising incessantly, promoting junk food every chance they get, as well as excluding young people from critical discussions about public health and reflections on their own impact.
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