A Jupiter-size exoplanet orbiting a dead star baffled astronomers. But the planet named WD 1856 b could preview the fate of ...
"These two planets have densities comparable to a nice blob of shaving foam fresh from the can." ...
Astronomers have uncovered a pair of giant planets that are lighter than cotton candy—super-puffs the size of Jupiter.
It orbits a nearby red dwarf star within the star's habitable, or 'Goldilocks', zone - the region where temperatures are ...
Researchers have discovered a planet which, by all intents and purposes, should not be there. The world, coined WD 1856 b, is slightly larger than Jupiter and circles a dead star only about the size ...
The planet should not have survived the star's red giant phase—which sees a star balloon to more than 100 times its original ...
For the first time, NASA's TESS (Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite) mission has identified a planet orbiting a distant star thanks to its warping of space-time. Unlike the star-hugging transiting ...
WD 1856 b circles the burnt-out core of a dead star at a distance that seems almost impossible. The giant planet skims around ...
A Jupiter-sized planet orbits a dead white dwarf 80 light-years away. A 2026 Nature study using JWST found it didn't survive ...
Astronomers have discovered two of the least dense giant planets ever found worlds roughly the size of Jupiter but so ...
Credit: NASA/Daniel Rutter There are planets that make Earth look small. And then there are planets like TOI-791 b and ...