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First known moon outside Solar System discovered

"This would be the first case of detecting a moon outside our solar system," said David Kipping, an assistant professor of astronomy at Columbia University.

Reported by: PTI New York Published : Oct 04, 2018 13:44 IST, Updated : Oct 04, 2018 13:44 IST
Representative Image
Image Source : AP

Representative Image

Astronomers may have discovered the first known moon outside our solar system, orbiting a gas-giant planet 8,000 light-years away.

According to the finding published in the journal Science Advances, the candidate exomoon, moons orbiting planets in other star systems, is unusual because of its large size, comparable to the diameter of Neptune.

Such gargantuan moons do not exist in our own solar system, where nearly 200 natural satellites have been catalouged, said researchers from the Columbia University in the US.

"This would be the first case of detecting a moon outside our solar system," said David Kipping, an assistant professor of astronomy at Columbia University.

"If confirmed by follow-up Hubble observations, the finding could provide vital clues about the development of planetary systems and may cause experts to revisit theories of how moons form around planets," Kipping said.

In looking for exomoons, the researchers analysed data from 284 Kepler-discovered planets that were in comparatively wide orbits, with periods greater than 30 days, around their host star.

The observations measured the momentary dimming of starlight as a planet passed in front of its star, called a transit. The researchers found one instance, in Kepler 1625b, that had intriguing anomalies.

"We saw little deviations and wobbles in the light curve that caught our attention," Kipping said.

The Kepler results were enough for the team to get 40 hours of time with Hubble Telescope to intensively study the planet, obtaining data four times more precise than that of Kepler.

The researchers monitored the planet before and during its 19-hour-long transit across the face of the star.

After it ended, Hubble detected a second and much smaller decrease in the star's brightness 3.5 hours later, consistent with "a moon trailing the planet like a dog following its owner on a leash," Kipping said.

"Unfortunately, the scheduled Hubble observations ended before the complete transit of the moon could be measured," Kipping said.

In addition to this dip in light, Hubble provided supporting evidence for the moon hypothesis by measuring that the planet began its transit 1.25 hours earlier than predicted.

This is consistent with the planet and moon orbiting a common centre of gravity (barycentre) that would cause the planet to wobble from its predicted location.

"An extraterrestrial civilisation watching the Earth and Moon transit the Sun would note similar anomalies in the timing of Earth's transit," Kipping said.

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