Astronomers measure powerful magnetic fields around hot Jupiter exoplanets

Young journalists club

News ID: 42289
Publish Date: 11:22 - 23 July 2019
TEHRAN, Jul 23 - Astronomers have for the first time directly measured the powerful magnetic fields surrounding hot Jupiters, gas-giant exoplanets orbiting close to their host stars.

Astronomers measure powerful magnetic fields around hot Jupiter exoplanetsTEHRAN, Young Journalists Club (YJC) -Unlike Jupiter, which is positioned in the outer solar system, hot Jupiters trace more intimate orbits. Their proximity to their host stars makes them "hot." 

Of the thousands of exoplanets discovered by astronomers, a larger percentage are hot Jupiters. Astronomers theorized the gas giants boasted intense magnetic fields, but until now, scientists were unable to directly measure electromagnetic forces around hot Jupiters.

"Our study is the first to use observed signals to derive exoplanet magnetic field strengths," Evgenya Shkolnik, professor of space sciences at Arizona State University, said in a news release. "These signals appear to come from interactions between the magnetic fields of the star and the tightly orbiting planet."

Scientists have previously used radio observations to establish upper limits for the magnetic fields around hot Jupiters. In gas giants, magnetic fields are generated by the swirling movements of conducting materials in the planet's liquid-metalic core.

"We combined measurements of increased stellar emission from the magnetic star-planet interactions together with physics theory to calculate the magnetic field strengths for four hot Jupiters," said Wilson Cauley of the University of Colorado.

Because magnetic fields interact with stellar emissions, researchers were able to calculate the strength of the distant planets' magnetic fields by capturing high-resolution images of the stars' magnetically heated chromospheres. The images allowed researchers to measure emissions from ionized calcium.

"We used the power estimates to calculate magnetic field strengths for the planets using a theory for how the planets' magnetic fields interact with the stellar magnetic fields," Shkolnik said.

Researchers detailed their calculations this week in the journal Nature Astronomy.

"Magnetic fields like to be in a state of low energy. If you twist or stretch the field like a rubber band, this increases the energy stored in the magnetic field." said Cauley. "Hot Jupiters orbit very close to their parent stars and so the planet's magnetic field can twist and stretch the star's magnetic field."

Source: upi

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