Oldest Known Planet Identified

In new observations of a distant region of primitive stars, astronomers have found the oldest known planet, a huge gaseous object almost three times as old as Earth and nearly as old as the universe itself. 
 The discovery, based on measurements by the Hubble Space Telescope, challenged scientists to rethink theories of how, when and where planets form. It is tantalizing evidence, astronomers said, that planets began appearing billions of years earlier than previously thought and so may be more abundant.

Astronomers reported yesterday that the planet is more than twice as massive as Jupiter and is orbiting a pair of burned-out stars. It appears to have formed 12.7 billion years ago, within a billion years of the origin of the universe in the theorized Big Bang. 
 The planet was found in the heart of a group of extremely ancient stars, known as a globular star cluster. This cluster, M4, is 7,200 light-years from Earth in the summer constellation Scorpius. The stars there are estimated to have formed almost 13 billion years ago, so early that the region is deficient in heavy elements. For the full press release and an artist’s concept of what it might look like see this link. http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/2003/19/

2 thoughts on “Oldest Known Planet Identified

  1. Thanks Tom for finding all the astronomy tidbits. This has been an interest of mine for 40 years.

  2. Tom, I immediately went to the Toronto Star to search out their story line on this discovery. Thanks for the breaking news coverage. Martha will be able to view the stars now with her TLC super vision.

Comments are closed.