Science has discovered HELL
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| An artist's rendering of 55 Cancri-e. Photo: Getty Images |
Hell has an address: 55 Cancri-e is the first alien planet to have
some of its surface features directly observed. And it’s no tropical
paradise.
For some time 55 Cancri-e has been considered “strange.” Some felt it
may be made of diamond. Others suggested it was covered in exotic
fluids.
So an international team of astronomers headed up by the University
of Cambridge has examined data captured by NASA’s Spitzer Space
Telescope about this 40 light-year-distant “super-Earth.”
Orbiting a sun-like star in the constellation Cancer, the astronomers
observed the rocky planet through several entire orbits — each just 18
hours.
What they found is a world of extremes.
- The planet is tidal-locked, meaning one face is permanently pointing toward the star.
- This face is a sea of molten lava, with a surface temperature of 2,400 degrees C (4,352 F).
- The “dark side” is barely better.
- It’s solid — but simmering at 1,100 C (2,012 F).
All this is odd: It shouldn’t be that hot, astronomers say, even though it does sit relatively close to its star.
They also found an out-of-place “hot spot.”
At about the halfway point between the point closest to the star and the night side is a bright streak.
The astronomers suggest this may be fast-flowing lava, behaving in a way very similar to water due to its extreme temperature.
“This shift either indicates some degree of heat recirculation
confined to the day side, or points to surface features with extremely
high temperatures, such as lava flows,” a statement reads.
The data suggests a lava world where the lava becomes hardened on the dark side of the planet.
“The day side could possibly have rivers of lava and big pools of
extremely hot magma, but we think the night side would have solidified
lava flows like those found in Hawaii,” said Michael Gillon of the
University of Liège in Belgium.
55 Cancri-e is one of only a few rocky worlds close enough for detailed observation.
It also belongs to a type of rocky “super-Earth” planet that appears
to be common, based on just a decade’s worth of discoveries of alien
worlds.
“Our view of this planet keeps evolving,” says Brice Olivier Demory
of the University of Cambridge in England, lead author of the report.
“The latest findings tell us the planet has hot nights and significantly
hotter days. This indicates the planet inefficiently transports heat
around the planet. We propose this could be explained by an atmosphere
that would exist only on the day side of the planet, or by lava flows at
the planet surface.”
The study, published in the science journal Nature, details how astronomers used infrared sensors to map the conditions on 55 Cancri-e’s rocky surface.
“By understanding the characteristics of the instrument — and using
novel calibration techniques of a small region of a single pixel — we
are attempting to eke out every bit of science possible from a detector
that was not designed for this type of high-precision observation,” said
Jessica Krick of NASA’s Spitzer Space Science Center, at the California
Institute of Technology in Pasadena.

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