Scientists Unlock Secrets of an Alien World's Magnetic Field

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The strength of an alien world's magnetic field may have been deduced for the first time by analyzing the winds of stellar particles slamming into it.
Image: Evaporating hot Jupiter
An artist's conception shows an evaporating "hot Jupiter" exoplanet.NASA / GSFC

The strength of an alien world's magnetic field may have been deduced for the first time, by analyzing extraordinarily fast winds slamming against it from the planet's star, researchers say.

This research could help gauge the strength of other exoplanets' magnetic fields as well, scientists say.

The magnetic field of a planet can influence its evolution in crucial ways. "It works as a shield against stellar wind particles, which erode the atmosphere, so it is important to know if this field is big or small," said study lead author Kristina Kislyakova, a planetary scientist at the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Graz. [The Strangest Alien Planets]

In order to find out magnetic details about exoplanets — planets beyond our own solar system — Kislyakova and her colleagues investigated HD 209458b, which orbits a sunlike star in the constellation Pegasus about 150 light-years from Earth. This alien world is only about 70 percent the mass of Jupiter, but nearly 40 percent wider.

HD 209458b is a "hot Jupiter," a gas giant that orbits its star closer than Mercury does to the sun — specifically, HD 209458b circles its star at a distance of less than one-twentieth the distance between the sun and Earth. The extraordinary roasting that HD 209458b endures causes its atmosphere to blow away like the tail of a comet.

The researchers used NASA's Hubble Space Telescope to analyze the spectrum of light from HD 209458b as it passed in front of its star. The data revealed hydrogen atoms moving away extremely quickly from the exoplanet in a lopsided manner.

To help explain the unusual way in which the hydrogen is blowing off HD 209458b, the scientists built a 3-D model to account for all the known interactions between planetary atmospheres and stellar winds, the flow of particles that stream off stars. The model suggested the exoplanet had a magnetic field about 10 percent as strong as Jupiter's, and that the stellar wind was blowing at about 895,000 mph (1.44 million km/h).

These findings, detailed in the journal Science, support previous research suggesting that hot Jupiters have relatively weak magnetic fields compared with their cooler gas giant cousins.

This is a condensed version of a report from Space.com. Read the full report. Follow Space.com on Twitter, Facebook or Google+.

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