Two Exocomet Families Found Around Baby Star System

Scientists have found two families of comets in the developing Beta Pictoris star system, located about 64 million light-years from Earth, including one group that appears to be remnants of a smashed-up protoplanet.

The discovery bolsters our theoretical understanding of the violent processes that led to the formation of Earth and the other terrestrial planets in the solar system.

PHOTOS: Exquisite Exoplanetary Art

If you look back at the solar system when it was only 22 million years old, you might have seen phenomena thats a like more like whats happening in Beta Pic, astrophysicist Aki Roberge, with NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., told Discovery News.

Rocky planets like the Earth, or any kind of solid planet, are built up out of comets and asteroids. Its the collisions of those bodies that build up the planets in the first place, she said.

Astronomers found the exocomets by analyzing eight years of archived data collected by the HARPS instrument on ESA's 3.6-meter telescope at La Silla Observatory in Chile. They were focusing on small, evaporating bodies that passed across the face of their parent star, relative to the telescopes line of sight.

ANALYSIS: Dust to Dust: The Death of an Exoplanet

Our results show that the evaporating bodies observed for decades in the Beta Pictoris system are analogous to the comets in our own solar system, astronomer Flavien Kiefer, with the French National Centre for Scientific Research in Paris, and colleagues wrote in an article published in this week's Nature.

One group of comets, designated population S, appears to be gravitationally tied to massive planet, possibly Beta Pictoris b, which circles its parent star about as far as Saturn orbits the sun. Astronomers strongly suspect a second gas giant planet exists beyond Beta Pic b.

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Two Exocomet Families Found Around Baby Star System

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