Send news tip to FOXNews.com

SUBMIT

'Embryonic Planet' Found Growing Around Nearby Star

Wednesday, April 02, 2008

An embryonic planet still in the first stages of formation has been discovered enclosed in a "womb of gas" around a young star, British astronomers announced Wednesday.

The protoplanet, known as HL Tau b after its parent star, HL Tau, could be just a few hundred years old, which would make it the youngest to have been observed.

It is likely to grow into a gas giant, similar to Jupiter and Saturn, and it will offer fresh insights into the way that planets form discs of dust and gas around stars.

• Click here to visit FOXNews.com's Space Center.

Jane Greaves, of the University of St. Andrews, Scotland, who led the Anglo-American team that found it, said: "The planet will probably take millions of years to settle down into its final form of something like Jupiter. We really are seeing it very early — even a bit like the first cells that make up a human embryo in the womb."

The discovery, to be presented Wednesday at the Royal Astronomical Society annual conference in Belfast, Northern Ireland, was made while the research team was studying HL Tau, a star about 520 light years from Earth in the constellation of Taurus.

Related

Observations with telescopes at the Very Large Array in New Mexico indicated that dust in a disc around HL Tau was starting to condense into a planet. This was confirmed by observations at Jodrell Bank in Cheshire, England, which is threatened with closure because of a funding shortfall.

Fox News Video
ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

TECH TUESDAY

ONLY ON FOX

Advertise on FOXNews.com ,FOX News Channel , and FOX News Radio Jobs at FOX News Channel. Internships @ FNCU

Terms of use. Privacy Statement. For FOXNews.com comments write to foxnewsonline@foxnews.com; For FOX News Channel comments write to yourcomments@foxnews.com

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. © 2008 FOX News Network, LLC. All rights reserved. All market data delayed 20 minutes.