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Ground-based (Digitized Sky Survey) image of TMR-1C region

- Object NameObject NameA name or catalog number that astronomers use to identify an astronomical object.TMR-1C
- Release DateMay 28, 1998
- Science ReleaseHubble Takes First Image of a Possible Planet around Another Star and Finds a Runaway World
- CreditScience Release Credit: S. Terebey (Extrasolar Research Corp.) and NASA
Related Images & Videos
Follow-Up Observations Show Potential Planet TMR-1C is Really a Star
This NASA Hubble Telescope near-infrared image of newborn binary stars (image center) reveals a long thin nebula pointing toward a faint companion object (bottom left) which could be the first extrasolar planet to be imaged directly. The brightest objects in the image are the...

Simulated image of planetary formation
False color image of two gas giant protoplanets that have formed quickly in a disk of gas and dust. Each of the two protoplanets (yellow-red blobs) contains several Jupiter-masses of gas and dust. They orbit at distances of about 5 and 10 times the Earth's distance from the Sun...

Zoom-In/Visualization of TMR-1C Planet
Zooming into the Taurus star-forming cloud, as seen in visible light, the young binary and planet are revealed as the wavelength shifts to the near infrared. A simulated 3D flyby indicates a possible interpretation of the layout of this region and its possible young planet.
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Claire Andreoli
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt, Maryland
claire.andreoli@nasa.gov