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Three separate Hubble views of extrasolar planet candidate

Three separate Hubble views of extrasolar planet candidate


Date: 10 January 2005
Satellite: Hubble
Depicts: 2MASSWJ 1207334-393254

Credit: NASA, ESA, G. Schneider (Steward Observatory, Univ. of Arizona, USA), I. Song (Gemini Observ.), B. Zuckerman, E. Becklin (Univ. of California, USA), P. Lowrance (California Inst. of Technology, USA), B. Macintosh (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, USA), M. Bessell (Australian National Univ.), and C. Dumas and G. Chauvin (European Southern Observatory)

These are Hubble Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS) Camera 1 images of 2M1207's giant planetary companion candidate at three increasingly longer near-infrared wavelengths [left to right: 0.9, 1.1, and 1.6 μm]. The light from 2M1207 itself has been greatly reduced by subtracting a second image of the star taken with Hubble rolled to a different orientation in the sky. Imperfections in the "differential roll" subtraction technique give rise to optical artifacts at the location of 2M1207, which is centred in the red circle of 0.2 arc-second radius. The giant planetary companion candidate is the white disk located outside and to the lower right of the red circle. 2M1207, a young brown dwarf of spectral type M8.5, is itself quite red - 11 times fainter at 0.9 μm than it is at 1.6 μm. The giant planetary companion candidate at 0.9 μm is significantly redder in comparison, 44 times fainter at 0.9 μm than it is at 1.6 μm where, at that shorter wavelength, it is also 720 times fainter than 2M1207.

 

Last Update: 1 September 2019
8-Oct-2024 09:42 UT

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