Kepler-78b: a lava world that ‘shouldn't exist’

tru_m.a.c

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Kepler-78b orbits a Sun-like G-type star located 400 light-years from Earth in the constellation Cygnus. It is a planet that circles its star every eight and a half hours at a distance of less than 1.6 million km (1 million mi). The planet is only 2.7 stellar radii from the center of the star, or 1.7 stellar radii from the star's surface. This orbit is one of the tightest known, with the world approximately 900,000 km (550,000 mi) above the star's surface. The surface temperature of the planet is thought to be close to2400° C (4300° F).

Its formation is a mystery. According to our current theories of planet formation, the planet should not have formed so close to its host star and neither could it have moved there. The planet will however be consumed by its star very soon, in astronomical terms. Gravitational tides are gradually moving it closer to its host star, Kepler-78. The star’s gravity will eventually rip the planet apart and the planet will likely disappear within three billion years.

Kepler-78b is also the first known Earth-sized world with an Earth-sized density. The planet is around 20 percent larger than Earth and has a diameter of nearly 15,000 km (9,200 mi). The planet also weighs 1.8 times as much as Earth, resulting in it having a density similar to Earth’s. Because of this similar density, Kepler-78b is thought to be composed of iron and rock.

When the planetary system of Kepler-78 was forming, the star was much larger than it is now. The current orbit of Kepler-78b would at that time been within the larger star; planets cannot form inside stars. Likewise, the planet could not have formed further out in the system and then migrated inward, as it would have eventually migrated into the star.

Kepler-78b has been made a member of a new class of planets that were identified from data from NASA’s Kepler spacecraft. These worlds all orbit their host stars with periods of less than 12 hours and all are around the same size of Earth. Kepler-10b has a radius of 1.42 x the radius of the Earth while Kepler-36b has a radius of 1.49 that of Earth. Kepler-78b has an even smaller radius, at 1.16 times that of Earth.

Kepler-78b was studied using a new high-precision spectrograph called HARPS-North, at the Roque de los Muchachos Observatory on La Palma. The work was coordinated with another, independent team who were using the HIRES spectrograph at the Keck Observatory. The measurements from the two teams correlated, which increased confidence in the results.

It is possible our solar system once had a planet like Kepler-78b, though such a planet would have been destroyed eons ago.

- See more at: http://www.iflscience.com/space/kepler-78b-lava-world-‘shouldnt-exist’#sthash.juxfkxA2.dpuf
 

tru_m.a.c

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Couldn't it had been a rogue planet that was captured by the stars gravity?

thought the same at first, but per the piece:

Likewise, the planet could not have formed further out in the system and then migrated inward, as it would have eventually migrated into the star.

the way its explained leads you to believe its a rogue planet. you kind of have to picture the formation and orbit on your own
 

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Dimitar Sasselov (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics) told the audience that we had now found about a dozen objects orbiting various stars with periods of between three and ten hours, creating serious questions about how such planets form and survive. It’s even conceivable, said Sasselov, that Kepler-78b is the core of a former gas giant. Amidst the questions, what we do know is that its radius is about 1.2 times that of Earth and its mass 1.7 times Earth’s. With both size and mass measured, it’s possible to calculate the density, and that figure works out to 5 grams per cubic centimeter, which is a density much like our planet’s.

Kepler-78b, then, is most likely made of rock and iron.

So we have an Earth-sized planet with Earth-like density in an orbit that remains a mystery. The star Kepler-78b orbits was larger than it is now when the planetary system was forming. “[The planet] couldn’t have formed in place because you can’t form a planet inside a star,” said Sasselov. “It couldn’t have formed further out and migrated inward, because it would have migrated all the way into the star. This planet is an enigma.” It is also a world that will eventually be torn apart by gravitational forces as it is drawn inexorably closer to the star, although according to this CfA news release, that won’t happen for another three billion years.

With temperatures as high as 3100 K on the surface, Kepler-78b is some 40 times closer to its star than Mercury is to the Sun, making my musings about Vulcan’s sky seem relatively tame. The papers are Howard et al., “A rocky composition for an Earth-sized exoplanet,” published online in Nature 30 October 2013 (abstract), and Pepe et al., “An Earth-sized planet with an Earth-like density,” published online in Nature 30 October 2013 (abstract).

more info
 
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