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Young rogue planet grows like a star

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Science

Young rogue planet grows like a star

When a star rapidly accumulates gas and dust during its early growth phase, it’s called an accretion burst. Now, for the first time, astronomers have observed a planet doing the same thing. The discovery, made using the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) and the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), shows that the infancy of certain planetary-mass objects and that of newborn stars may share similar characteristics.

In their study, which is detailed in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, astronomers led by Víctor Almendros-Abad at Italy’s Palermo Astronomical Observatory; Ray Jayawardhana of Johns Hopkins University in the US; and Belinda Damian and Aleks Scholz of the University of St Andrews, UK, focused on a planet known as Cha1107-7626. Located around 620 light-years from Earth, this planet has a mass approximately five to 10 times that of Jupiter. Unlike Jupiter, though, it does not orbit around a central star. Instead, it floats freely in space as a “rogue” planet, one of many identified in recent years.
An accretion burst in Cha1107-7626
Like other rogue planets, Cha1107-7626 was known to be surrounded by a disk of dust and gas. When material from this disk spirals, or accretes, onto the planet, the planet grows.
What Almendros-Abad and colleagues discovered is that this process is not uniform. Using the VLT’s XSHOOTER and the NIRSpec and MIRI instruments on JWST, they found that Cha1107-7626 experienced a burst of accretion beginning in June 2025. This is the first time anyone has seen an accretion burst in an object with such a low mass, and the peak accretion rate of six billion tonnes per second makes it the strongest accretion episode ever recorded in a planetary-mass object. It may not be over, either. At the end of August, when the observing campaign ended, the burst was still ongoing.
An infancy similar to a star’s
The team identified several parallels between Cha1107-7626’s accretion burst and those that young stars experience. Among them were clear signs that gas is being funnelled onto the planet. “This indicates that magnetic fields structure the flow of gas, which is again something well known from stars,” explains Scholz. “Overall, our discovery is establishing interesting, perhaps surprising parallels between stars and planets, which I’m not sure we fully understand yet.”
The astronomers also found that the chemistry of the disc around the planet changed during accretion, with water being present in this phase even though it hadn’t been before. This effect has previously been spotted in stars, but never in a planet until now.
“We’re struck by quite how much the infancy of free-floating planetary-mass objects resembles that of stars like the Sun,” Jayawardhana says. “Our new findings underscore that similarity and imply that some objects comparable to giant planets form the way stars do, from contracting clouds of gas and dust accompanied by disks of their own, and they go through growth episodes just like newborn stars.”

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