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Grazing in the gap

Grazing in the gap
May 12, 2013

While astronomers now know that exoplanets are exceedingly common in the galaxy, the mechanics by which they are formed aren’t well understood. Planetary childhood remains a mystery.

Young stars start out with a massive disk of gas and dust that over time, astronomers think, either diffuses away or coalesces into planets and asteroids. “The speculation is that as planets form they clear out a region of gas and dust around them, forming a telltale ‘gap’ in the disk”, said Stefan Kraus, an astronomer with the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and the University of Exeter.

Disks with fully cleared gaps have been observed before, but Kraus and his team may have found a system in an important in-between stage, where the recently formed planets still interact with the disk material.

The team’s target star, V1247 Orionis, was identified by a lack of emissions that indicated the presence of a gap in the dust disk. “This system has an inner dust disk, a big gap, and then an outer disk,” Kraus said.