NASA telescopes reveal secrets of the dark sides of 'hot Jupiter' exoplanets
Mike Wehner @MikeWehner
August 27th, 2019 at 11:08 PM
Of all the types of exoplanets researchers have discovered in recent years with ever more powerful telescope technology, the so-called hot Jupiters might be the most interesting. Theyre not the kind of planets wed ever expect to find life on, but theyre so unlike anything we see in our own solar system that you cant help but wonder what they might be like.
Hot Jupiter planets are, as their name suggests, gas giants like our own Jupiter, but much, much warmer. The planets orbit much closer to their host star than Jupiter does, and that causes temperatures to spike. Now, a new study using data from both the Spitzer telescope and the venerable Hubble reveals something very interesting about the strange, swirling masses of hot gas.
Due to the fact that hot Jupiters orbit their stars so closely, theyre often tidally locked to their host star, meaning that one side of the planet is always facing the star while the other side is always dark. However, because the temperatures of the sunlit side of the gaseous worlds can vary by well over a thousand degrees, you might think the dark sides of various hot Jupiters wouldnt have much in common with one another.
The research, published in Nature Astronomy, suggests that this isnt the case and that the dark side temperatures of hot Jupiters are typically quite similar. Of the 12 hot Jupiters examined in the study, the dark sides of the planets were all around 800°C. This flies in the face of established atmospheric models and hints at other natural mechanisms at work.
More:
https://bgr.com/2019/08/27/hot-jupiter-exoplanet-temperature-study/