Cotton candy-like planets may have rings

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Washington: A new research has found that some of the extremely low-density, “cotton candy like” exoplanets called super-puffs may actually have rings. Super-puffs are notable for having exceptionally large radii for their masses — which would give them seemingly incredibly low densities.

The adorably named bodies have been confounding scientists since they were first discovered because they are unlike any planets in our solar system and challenge our ideas of what distant planets can be like.

“We started thinking, what if these planets aren’t airy like cotton candy at all. What if the super-puffs seem so large because they are actually surrounded by rings?” said the researcher Carnegie’s Anthony Piro.

In our own solar system, all of the gas and ice giant planets have rings, with the most well-known example being the majestic rings of Saturn. But it has been difficult for astronomers to discover ringed planets orbiting distant stars.

The radii of exoplanets are measured during transits — when the exoplanet crosses in front of its host star causing a dip in the star’s light. The greater the size of the dip, the larger the exoplanet.

“We started to wonder, if you were to look back at us from a distant world, would you recognize Saturn as a ringed planet, or would it appear to be a puffy planet to an alien astronomer?” said Caltech’s Shreyas Vissapragada.

To test this hypothesis, Piro and Vissapragada simulated how a ringed exoplanet would look to an astronomer with high-precision instruments watching it transit in front of its host star. They also investigated the types of ring material that could account for observations of super-puffs. Their work demonstrated that rings could explain some, but not all, of the super-puffs that NASA’s Kepler mission has discovered so far.

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