| Jul 15, 2025 |
Ultra-hot Jupiter's death spiral could reveal stellar secretsAstronomers have tracked an extreme planet's orbital decay to understand how stars dissipate energy. |
| (Nanowerk News) Macquarie University astronomers have tracked an extreme planet's orbital decay, confirming it is spiralling towards its star in a cosmic death dance that could end in three possible ways. |
| The ultra-hot Jupiter exoplanet TOI-2109b, located 870 light-years from Earth, completes an orbit around its star in just 16 hours – making it the closest hot Jupiter ever discovered. |
| With a mass nearly five times that of Jupiter and almost twice Jupiter's size, TOI-2109b orbits even closer to its star than Mercury does to our Sun. |
| "Just to put it into context – Mercury's mass is almost 6,000 times smaller than Jupiter, but it still takes 88 days to orbit our Sun. For a huge gas giant such as TOI-2109b to fully orbit in 16 hours – it tells us that this is a planet located super-close to its star," says Dr Jaime A. Alvarado-Montes, a Macquarie Research Fellow who led the international study published today in The Astrophysical Journal ("Orbital Decay of the Ultra-Hot Jupiter TOI-2109b: Tidal Constraints and Transit-Timing Analysis"). |
| By analysing transit timing data from multiple ground-based telescopes, NASA's TESS mission and the European Space Agency's CHEOPS satellite spanning 2010 to 2024, the team detected subtle changes in the planet's orbit. |
| Both theoretical models and observations independently calculated that the planet's orbital period would decrease by at least 10 seconds over the next three years – confirming the planet may be spiralling towards its star. |
| The researchers identified three possible fates for TOI-2109b: it could be torn apart by tidal forces, plunge directly into its star, or have its gaseous envelope stripped away by intense radiation, leaving only a rocky core. |
| "This planet and its interesting situation could help us figure out some mysterious astronomical phenomena that so far we really don't have much evidence to explain," Dr Alvarado-Montes says. "It could tell us the story of many other solar systems." |
| The findings suggest some rocky planets in other solar systems might be the stripped cores of former gas giants – a possibility that could reshape our understanding of planetary evolution. |
| With continued monitoring over the next three to five years, astronomers will detect the predicted orbital changes, providing real-time observation of a planetary system in its death throes. |
| Source: Macquarie University (Note: Content may be edited for style and length) |
