Scientists have discovered that a planet outside of the solar system may have a complex atmosphere made of metal gases that operate like Earth's atmosphere, Adam Schrader reported for United Press International (UPI).
Photo Insert: WASP-189b
The research, published in the journal Nature Astronomy, found evidence that metals discovered in the atmosphere of WASP-189b are layered -- the first time research has suggested that gas giant planets like Jupiter might have a complex atmosphere like Earth's.
WASP-189b is a hellish planet located 322 light-years from Earth and is perhaps the most extreme of any of the 4,200 known exoplanets -- with daytime temperatures of about 5,792 degrees Fahrenheit.
The research says that astronomers, who have assumed that the atmospheres of exoplanets exist as a uniform layer, must adjust how they research and understand exoplanets -- including those that are Earth-like.
"In the past, it has only been possible to analyze the atmospheres of this type of exoplanet with one-dimensional models," said Bibiana Prinoth, a doctoral student at Lund University in Sweden and lead author of the study.
"In our study, we pave the way for using high-resolution spectrographs to gain a much deeper understanding of exoplanet atmospheres."
The researchers particularly noted the presence of titanium oxide, which absorbs short wave radiation like the ultraviolet radiation emitted by stars such as the sun. "Its detection could therefore indicate a layer in the atmosphere of WASP-189b that interacts with the stellar irradiation similarly to how the ozone layer does on Earth," said study co-author Kevin Heng -- a professor of astrophysics at the University of Bern.
Prinoth said that researchers found evidence that the atmosphere is layered with different gasses in different ways -- like layers of water vapor and ozone in Earth's atmosphere. The other metal gases found in the atmosphere of WASP-189b include iron, chromium, vanadium, magnesium, and manganese.
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