ALMA Finds Double Star with Weird and Wild Planet-forming Discs
Artists impression of the discs around the young stars HK Tauri A and B
Astronomers using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) have found wildly misaligned planet-forming gas discs around the two young stars in the binary system HK Tauri. These new ALMA observations provide the clearest picture ever of protoplanetary discs in a double star. The new result also helps to explain why so many exoplanets unlike the planets in the Solar System came to have strange, eccentric or inclined orbits. The results will appear in the journal Nature on 31 July 2014.
Unlike our solitary Sun, most stars form in binary pairs two stars that are in orbit around each other. Binary stars are very common, but they pose a number of questions, including how and where planets form in such complex environments.
ALMA has now given us the best view yet of a binary star system sporting protoplanetary discs and we find that the discs are mutually misaligned! said Eric Jensen, an astronomer at Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania, USA.
The two stars in the HK Tauri system, which is located about 450 light-years from Earth in the constellation of Taurus (The Bull), are less than five million years old and separated by about 58 billion kilometres this is 13 times the distance of Neptune from the Sun.
This image of the binary system HK Tauri combines visible light and infrared data from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope with new data from ALMA
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