Uncovering the Mystery of a 12.8 Billion Year Old Planet

In summary, a Jupiter-sized planet has been found in the M4 globular cluster, indicating that the stars it orbits are approximately 12.7 billion years old. This discovery was made by Stein Sigurdsson at Penn State using the Hubble Space Telescope. The planet was found using the "wobble" method, and has a 100 year period. This is a significant finding because globular clusters are among the oldest objects in the universe, and this planet's existence supports the theory of a 12.7 billion year old universe. There may be other clusters like M4 in the Milky Way galaxy, and this planet's discovery adds to our understanding of the formation of planets in the early universe.
  • #1
quantumcarl
770
0
http://www.msnbc.com/news/937147.asp

Check this out. This Jupiter-sized planet is practically as old as the universe. Go figure.
 
Astronomy news on Phys.org
  • #2
Originally posted by quantumcarl
http://www.msnbc.com/news/937147.asp

Check this out. This Jupiter-sized planet is practically as old as the universe. Go figure.

this is absolutely fascinating. it is a 10 July 2003 newsarticle
talking about an article in "this week's Science" magazine and
Stein Sigurdsson is at Penn State and was using the Hubble
Space Telescope. To my pitifully conventional mind this has all
the signs of being genuine. have to take it seriously

They found a planet in the M4 globular cluster!

It has been known for a long time that globular clusters are
very old among the oldest objects, and all the stars in them formed at about the same time, and their metal-poor spectra show they are old and their H-R diagrams are all shot to hell from old-age. Globular clusters are so extremely well studied. So this is the opposite from wild speculation.

A planet in a globular cluster strongly indicates that at least the stars that the planet orbits are 12.7 or so billion years old.

They found it by wobble.

M4 cluster is 7200 light years away

There is a whole bunch of clusters like that swarming around the MW galaxy.

Maybe someone will think of a way the planet could have formed more recently and got attached to an old star. But the simplest explanation seems to me just what Sigurdsson said----it is a 12.7 billion year old planet. Whoah!

Article says 100 year period, with distance to the pair of central bodies being like that from sun to Uranus or so.

Thx quantumcarl, being told about such things is one of the biggest reasons I like coming to PF
 
  • #3
Originally posted by quantumcarl
http://www.msnbc.com/news/937147.asp

Check this out. This Jupiter-sized planet is practically as old as the universe. Go figure.

I guess it is back to the drawing board to come up with yet another provincially miniscule and meaningless age for the universe!
 
  • #4
some feedback on that theory..

http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/oldest_planet_030711.html
 
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  • #5


Originally posted by subtillioN
I guess it is back to the drawing board to come up with yet another provincially miniscule and meaningless age for the universe!
Just out of curiosity (no, I don't want to argue about it in this thread) how old do you think the universe is?
 
  • #6
Originally posted by kleinma
some feedback on that theory..

http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/oldest_planet_030711.html

...on which theory?
 
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  • #7


Originally posted by russ_watters
Just out of curiosity (no, I don't want to argue about it in this thread) how old do you think the universe is?

i thought the leading estimate was around 13-14 billion years?
 
  • #8


Originally posted by russ_watters
Just out of curiosity (no, I don't want to argue about it in this thread) how old do you think the universe is?

I don't think it has an age. There is no sense in assuming a creation ex nihilo...
 
  • #9


Originally posted by kleinma
i thought the leading estimate was around 13-14 billion years?

There are known structures in the Universe that would have taken ~150 billion years to create.
 
  • #10
Originally posted by quantumcarl
Check this out. This Jupiter-sized planet is practically as old as the universe. Go figure.

A minor correction...

One of the articles linked herein, (kleinma's link) and the one I read in the paper today, both stated that it is 2.5 times the size of Jupiter.

(Not anything serious though, neat age, but no pictures awwwwww!)
 
  • #11


Originally posted by marcus
this is absolutely fascinating. it is a 10 July 2003 newsarticle
talking about an article in "this week's Science" magazine and
Stein Sigurdsson is at Penn State and was using the Hubble
Space Telescope. To my pitifully conventional mind this has all
the signs of being genuine. have to take it seriously

They found a planet in the M4 globular cluster!

It has been known for a long time that globular clusters are
very old among the oldest objects, and all the stars in them formed at about the same time, and their metal-poor spectra show they are old and their H-R diagrams are all shot to hell from old-age. Globular clusters are so extremely well studied. So this is the opposite from wild speculation.

A planet in a globular cluster strongly indicates that at least the stars that the planet orbits are 12.7 or so billion years old.

They found it by wobble.

M4 cluster is 7200 light years away

There is a whole bunch of clusters like that swarming around the MW galaxy.

Maybe someone will think of a way the planet could have formed more recently and got attached to an old star. But the simplest explanation seems to me just what Sigurdsson said----it is a 12.7 billion year old planet. Whoah!

Article says 100 year period, with distance to the pair of central bodies being like that from sun to Uranus or so.

Thx quantumcarl, being told about such things is one of the biggest reasons I like coming to PF

Marcus, your knowledge of this section of the universe astounds me... that's one reason I come to PF!

Wobble creates a readable wave, no? What a unique way to find planets! There is also the ecliptic method only seen when a planet eclipses its solar host... that's a lot more uncommon since the coordinates of our planet must line up with the orbit of a planet which eclipses the sun in question. ****ing far out... no kidding!

I can see a Jupiter-like planet forming not long after the BB. I would think its a simple collection of plasmas, radiation etc... that had 1 or so billion years to congeal enough to go spherical and be caught in a sun's gravitational field.

I mean, if a sun can form during the first billion years after the BB, why not a psuedo sun like Jupiter?
 
  • #12


Originally posted by quantumcarl
I can see a Jupiter-like planet forming not long after the BB. I would think its a simple collection of plasmas, radiation etc... that had 1 or so billion years to congeal enough to go spherical and be caught in a sun's gravitational field.

I mean, if a sun can form during the first billion years after the BB, why not a psuedo sun like Jupiter?

The galaxies at the very limits of astronomical perception do not look embryonic whatsoever. In fact they look exactly the same and they have the very same distribution of old and young stars as the galaxies in the immediate vicinity. The furthest galaxies would have time for a mere 2 or 3 rotations! Do you suppose that their rotational winding structure could have formed in that time-frame?
 
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  • #13


Originally posted by marcus
this is absolutely fascinating.

Yes it is! What do you think are the implications? Does this present a big problem for current theories of planet formation? Obviously some thinking must be modified, but this seems to have the overtones of a catastrophe for the standard model.
 
  • #14


Originally posted by subtillioN
The galaxies at the very limits of astronomical perception do not look embryonic whatsoever. In fact they look exactly the same and they have the very same distribution of old and young stars as the galaxies in the immediate vicinity. The furthest galaxies would have time for a mere 2 or 3 rotations! Do you suppose that their rotational winding structure could have formed in that time-frame?

This is a perplexing issue when it comes to proving the age of the universe. I would suppose nothing and let the astromathematitians have fun with that one.
 
  • #15


Originally posted by quantumcarl
This is a perplexing issue when it comes to proving the age of the universe. I would suppose nothing and let the astromathematitians have fun with that one.

exactly...we need not even suppose an age at all...
 
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  • #16
how did they calculate the age of the planet?
 
  • #17
Originally posted by loop quantum gravity
how did they calculate the age of the planet?

I'm not sure how they do it.

It may be a similar process to calculating the age of a palientological fossil by its association with the substrate its found in. As long as it is in "situ"... (or close to the original spot is fell when the animal/plant died)

So, when I find a Trilobite fossil in the Mesolithic layer of the geographic layers of the earth... and it seems that it has not been disturbed by humans or upheavals of volcanic or other disturbances... then i can safely say the fossil is from that period, 350 million years ago.

so, when the astronomers find this planet in an area of the universe that suggests it is around about the original place it formed... this area, according to its red shift and other factors, helps to determine the age of the object of interest by association.

I'm sure there are other spectral analyses that can be used to do determine an age of a celestial object.

What is far out is that the researchers of this particular phenomenon have somehow determined that the planet used to be in a different orbit around a different sun... then was bounced out of it into its current one.

How does one arrive at that conclusion?
 
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  • #18
I'm going to root for an OLDER universe idea! I won't guess just how old, just OLDER!

Maybe (just maybe) that big bang is not such a big deal after all;
just a kind of LOCAL bang. Maybe.

quart
 
  • #19
Originally posted by loop quantum gravity
how did they calculate the age of the planet?

they calculated the age of the globular cluster (of roughly a million stars) in which the planet was found

hundreds of globular clusters have been studied carefully for
a long time and their statistics worked out

it's pretty well established that all the stars in a cluster formed at around the same time
the age of the cluster can be determined from a statistical chart called its H-R diagram
that shows that the bigger faster burners have already left the main sequence and only the littler slower burners are still
in normal life

glob clusters are something they seem very confident about dating

and they tend to be old relative to spirals

like within a billion or two billion of the overall age of the U

that planet is in glob cluster called M4

google has stuff on globular clusters---a favorite topic of
study and discussion for astronomers for over 50 years
 
  • #20
Originally posted by marcus
they calculated the age of the globular cluster (of roughly a million stars) in which the planet was found

hundreds of globular clusters have been studied carefully for
a long time and their statistics worked out

it's pretty well established that all the stars in a cluster formed at around the same time
the age of the cluster can be determined from a statistical chart called its H-R diagram
that shows that the bigger faster burners have already left the main sequence and only the littler slower burners are still
in normal life

glob clusters are something they seem very confident about dating

and they tend to be old relative to spirals

like within a billion or two billion of the overall age of the U

that planet is in glob cluster called M4

google has stuff on globular clusters---a favorite topic of
study and discussion for astronomers for over 50 years

We used to call O'Henry chocolate bars "Globular Clusters". Some of them were pretty old. One had worms, it was so old... no... that was an Eat-More.

Thanks for the info Marcus.
 
  • #21
Problems with the "stellar evolution" interpretation of the HR diagram

Originally posted by marcus
it's pretty well established that all the stars in a cluster formed at around the same time the age of the cluster can be determined from a statistical chart called its H-R diagram
that shows that the bigger faster burners have already left the main sequence and only the littler slower burners are still
in normal life glob clusters are something they seem very confident about dating and they tend to be old relative to spirals like within a billion or two billion of the overall age of the U that planet is in glob cluster called M4 google has stuff on globular clusters---a favorite topic of study and discussion for astronomers for over 50 years

There are many observational inconsistencies with the "stellar evolution" interpretation of the HR diagram.

{Phobos deleted reprinted text which could be construed as a violation of copyright law...follow the link instead}

from :http://www.electric-cosmos.org/hrdiagr.htm
 
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  • #22
three links with definitions:

http://home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~umchuteb/agb.html

http://astro.oal.ul.pt/~tkendall/introduction/node9.html

http://www.seds.org/~spider/spider/Vars/rCrB.html

specific research paper:

http://cdsaas.u-strasbg.fr:2001/ApJ/journal/issues/ApJS/v114n1/36470/36470.html#sc4.2

quart
 
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  • #23
Mainly for quantumcarl:

Just please don't confuse the O Henry candy bar with the sacred Goo Goo Cluster. The revered Goo Goo Cluster, like certain cosmic phenomena, actually improves with age.

But, seriously folks... Galaxies collide. Asteroids are sometimes perturbed out of orbit. Why not an intragalactic analogue?

I suspect a local star system passed too close to elements of the cluster and part of the star system was captured. It would be interesting to know whether this observation is at the 'edge' of the cluster. (The odds against this may be "astronomical" (I don't know) but I believe it's possible.)

If not that or some other rational explanation; then we would have to re-evaluate our concept of Time, The Big Bang, etc. That's probably not going to happen.

Thanks, Rudi
 
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  • #24
Originally posted by r637h
Mainly for quantumcarl:

Just please don't confuse the O Henry candy bar with the sacred Goo Goo Cluster. The revered Goo Goo Cluster, like certain cosmic phenomena, actually improves with age.

...

If not that or some other rational explanation; then we would have to re-evaluate our concept of Time, The Big Bang, etc. That's probably not going to happen.

Thanks, Rudi

Rudi, I had to laugh on rereading my post on this thread with all its references to "globular clusters"---now visualized as chocolate/nut confections.
In any case I did not "get" all the excitement about this news item
since the age question just involves the age of M4.

The information has been around for a long time that those globs are nearly as old as the universe, so what's new? Finding that planet merely drew public attention to the fact that M4 and
similar things are known to be very old.

Maybe the more interesting consequences (though not so earth-shaking) of assuming that the planet is as old as M4---and not the result of some later fluke process such as you suggest----is that it would then have formed out of light elements.

There would have been less time for heavier elements to be cooked inside an previous generation of stars and released so that they could be involved in planet formation.

All that is at stake, so it seemed to me at least, is some ideas about whether or not heavier elements (by contributing to cores around which lighter matter can collect) play an essential role in forming planets. Maybe I'm missing something and there is more to it.

BTW to confirm the alternative fluke possibilities----I think, maybe someone can correct me if I am mistaken, that globular clusters are compact enough that they can actually fall through (!) the less-dense part of a spiral galaxy disc. A swarm of more than 100 globs is actually orbiting the Milky Way, but at large distances like tens of thousands of LY. Their orbits are so long that they seldom do encounter the disc, but on the rare occasions when M4 was falling thru the MW it MIGHT in fact have been in a position to absorb disc material, maybe not enough to significantly change the statistics, but enough to account for a younger star or planet getting into the mix.

The person who could clear up that possibility is Labguy, he posts here often and knows a lot of down to Earth astronomy. Like, do globular clusters actually fall thru the MW disc on rare occasions?---he would probably know this.
 
  • #25
Originally posted by marcus
A swarm of more than 100 globs is actually orbiting the Milky Way, but at large distances like tens of thousands of LY. Their orbits are so long that they seldom do encounter the disc, but on the rare occasions when M4 was falling thru the MW it MIGHT in fact have been in a position to absorb disc material, maybe not enough to significantly change the statistics, but enough to account for a younger star or planet getting into the mix (where the aledged 12 billion year old planet resides today).

I posted an article in the last version of PF about the evidence said to confirm the fact that the Milky Way was once in a collision with another gallaxy.

I forget the link or the name of the team to do the mapping of this anomaly. They found evidence of extragalactic material surrounding this galaxy... in a the shape of a doughnut through which we are passing.

This adds a few more variables concerning the type of materials a globular cluster would pick up and their origin.
 
  • #26


Originally posted by subtillioN
There are known structures in the Universe that would have taken ~150 billion years to create.

More on this, please?

I've been thinking along the same lines as QuantumCarl, maybe it's a binary system in which one star just didn't quite accumulate enough mass.
 

1. What is a "12.8 Billion Year Old Planet"?

A "12.8 Billion Year Old Planet" refers to a planet that is estimated to be 12.8 billion years old, based on scientific evidence and calculations.

2. How do scientists determine the age of a planet?

Scientists use various methods, such as radiometric dating, to determine the age of a planet. This involves studying the decay of radioactive isotopes in rocks and minerals to calculate the amount of time that has passed since the planet was formed.

3. Why is it significant to know the age of a planet?

Knowing the age of a planet can provide valuable information about its history and formation. It can also help scientists better understand the evolution of the universe and the processes that have shaped our solar system.

4. What is the oldest known planet in the universe?

The oldest known planet in the universe is estimated to be 13.5 billion years old. It is a gas giant planet located in the Milky Way galaxy, about 13,000 light-years away from Earth.

5. How does the age of a planet affect its physical characteristics?

The age of a planet can have a significant impact on its physical characteristics. For example, an older planet may have a thicker atmosphere and a more solid surface, while a younger planet may still be undergoing geological changes and have a thinner atmosphere.

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