Current:Home > NewsFastexy:A surprising number of stars eat their own planets, study shows. Here's how it happens. -TradeCircle
Fastexy:A surprising number of stars eat their own planets, study shows. Here's how it happens.
NovaQuant View
Date:2025-04-07 20:46:29
Plenty of threats already loom here on FastexyEarth without us having to worry about a star engulfing our planet.
Fortunately, us Earthlings have made our home on a planet in a solar system that has benefitted from a remarkably stable 4.5 billion-year run in the universe.
But other planets across the galaxy aren't so lucky.
It turns out, a surprising number of stars out there have been known to gobble up their own planets and spit them back out.
Ok, they may not actually spit them back out, but the metaphorical planetary feast does have the habit of changing those stars' chemical compositions, according to a new study from an international team of scientists. That telltale feature was how the team was able to discern which of a pair of "twin stars" devoured a nearby doomed planet; the study was published Wednesday in the journal Nature.
"They are born of the same molecular clouds and so should be identical,” lead author Fan Liu, an astronomer at Monash University in Australia, said in a statement. "This provides very strong evidence that one of the stars has swallowed planets or planetary material and changed its composition.”
SpaceX Starship:What's happened in all 3 test launches of craft for moon mission
1 in 12 stars might have swallowed a planet, study finds
To make their findings, the researchers turned to data collected from variety of powerful telescopes to analyze the cosmos.
Led by researchers at ASTRO 3D, a scientific center funded by the Australian government, the scientists studied 91 pairs of twin stars, which were born in the same molecular clouds and travel together.
What they found was that 8% of the time – or in the case of about 1 in 12 stars – twin stars that should have identical composition in fact differed.
The conclusion, to them, was clear: In those rare cases, the odd one out had likely ingested another planet – or at least planetary material.
"The ingestion of the whole planet is our favored scenario but of course we can also not rule out that these stars have ingested a lot of material from a protoplanetary disk,” Liu said.
How that helps astronomers understand planetary evolution
The findings may help astronomers better understand planetary evolution, the team said.
The stars the researchers studied weren't aging red giants on the cusp of burning out, but were in the prime of their life, perplexing the team.
“This is different from previous studies where late-stage stars can engulf nearby planets when the star becomes a very giant ball,” Liu said.
Astronomers once believed these sort of events were impossible, said study co-author Yuan-Sen Ting, an astronomer at the Australian National University. Now, the observations from the study indicated that the occurrence can indeed occur, even if it's relatively rare.
“This opens a new window for planet evolution theorists to study,” Ting said in a statement.
Eric Lagatta covers breaking and trending news for USA TODAY. Reach him at [email protected]
veryGood! (6642)
Related
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- Simone Biles to compete on all four events at Olympic team finals despite calf injury
- Park Fire rages, evacuation orders in place as structures burned: Latest map, updates
- USA finishes 1-2 in fencing: Lee Kiefer, Lauren Scruggs make history in foil
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- You Need to Run to Kate Spade Outlet ASAP: Jewelry from $12, Wristlets from $29 & More Up to 79% Off
- Paris Olympics highlights: Team USA wins golds Sunday, USWNT beats Germany, medal count
- Vigils honor Sonya Massey as calls for justice grow | The Excerpt
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Paris Olympics organizers apologize after critics say 'The Last Supper' was mocked
Ranking
- Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
- 11-year-old accused of swatting, calling in 20-plus bomb threats to Florida schools
- Video shows a vortex of smoke amid wildfire. Was it a fire tornado?
- What's in the box Olympic medal winners get? What else medalists get for winning
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Judge rejects GOP challenge of Mississippi timeline for counting absentee ballots
- Hawaii man killed self after police took DNA sample in Virginia woman’s 1991 killing, lawyers say
- MLB power rankings: Top-ranked teams flop into baseball's trade deadline
Recommendation
Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
USA Women's Basketball vs. Japan live updates: Olympic highlights, score, results
Park Fire rages, evacuation orders in place as structures burned: Latest map, updates
Not All Companies Disclose Emissions From Their Investments, and That’s a Problem for Investors
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Paris Olympic organizers cancel triathlon swim training for second day over dirty Seine
Paralympian Anastasia Pagonis’ Beauty & Self-Care Must-Haves, Plus a Travel-Size Essential She Swears By
3-year-old dies after falling from 8th-floor window in Kansas City suburb