Begin typing your search above and press return to search.
proflie-avatar
Login
exit_to_app
election commmission
access_time 22 Nov 2024 4:02 AM GMT
Champions Trophy tournament
access_time 21 Nov 2024 5:00 AM GMT
The illness in health care
access_time 20 Nov 2024 5:00 AM GMT
The fire in Manipur should be put out
access_time 21 Nov 2024 9:19 AM GMT
America should also be isolated
access_time 18 Nov 2024 11:57 AM GMT
Munambam Waqf issue decoded
access_time 16 Nov 2024 5:18 PM GMT
DEEP READ
Munambam Waqf issue decoded
access_time 16 Nov 2024 5:18 PM GMT
Ukraine
access_time 16 Aug 2023 5:46 AM GMT
Foreign espionage in the UK
access_time 22 Oct 2024 8:38 AM GMT
exit_to_app
Homechevron_rightSciencechevron_rightAnother sneak peek...

Another sneak peek into the distant worlds; NASA's Webb reveals extensive details of exoplanet

text_fields
bookmark_border
Another sneak peek into the distant worlds; NASAs Webb reveals extensive details of exoplanet
cancel

San Francisco: NASA's James Webb Space Telescope has revealed extensive details of an exoplanet, WASP-39 b and is for the first time a molecular and chemical profile of a distant world's sky is being able to collect by scientists.

Previously, Webb and other space telescopes, including NASA's Hubble and Spitzer, have provided isolated readings of the planet's atmosphere, but the new Webb readings reveal atoms, molecules, and even signs of active chemistry and clouds, according to an official report.

WASP-39 b, an orbiting planet about the mass of Saturn orbiting a star 700 light-years away, was observed with the telescope's array of highly sensitive instruments.

"We observed the exoplanet with multiple instruments that, together, provide a broad swath of the infrared spectrum and a panoply of chemical fingerprints inaccessible until (this mission)," said Natalie Batalha, an astronomer at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

The most recent data also suggest how these clouds might appear up close: broken up rather than a single, uniform blanket covering the planet, said the report.

"This is the first time we see concrete evidence of photochemistry, chemical reactions initiated by energetic stellar light on exoplanets," said Shang-Min Tsai, a researcher at the University of Oxford in the UK.

"I see this as a really promising outlook for advancing our understanding of exoplanet atmospheres with (this mission)," he added.

The chemical composition of WASP-39 b suggests a history of collisions and mergers of smaller bodies known as "planetesimals" to form an eventual goliath of a planet.

It also implies that oxygen is more abundant in the atmosphere than carbon.

The Webb telescope's instruments outperformed scientists' expectations by precisely parsing an exoplanet atmosphere, the report added.

-IANS Inputs

Show Full Article
TAGS:NASAExoplanetJames Webb
Next Story