You can’t judge a star by its protoplanetary disc

Eso_potw2528a_1024

eso_potw2528a July 14th, 2025

Credit: ALMA(ESO/NAOJ/NRAO)/A. Ribas et al.

Today’s Picture of the Week tells a story of redemption for one lonely star. The young star MP Mus (PDS 66) was thought to be all alone in the Universe, surrounded by nothing but a featureless band of gas and dust called a protoplanetary disc. In most cases, the material inside a protoplanetary disc condenses to form new planets around the star, leaving large gaps where the gas and dust used to be. These features are seen in almost every disc — but not in MP Mus’s. When astronomers first observed it with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), they saw a smooth, planet-free disc, shown here in the right image. The team, led by Álvaro Ribas, an astronomer at the University of Cambridge, UK, gave this star another chance and re-observed it with ALMA at longer wavelengths that probe even deeper into the protoplanetary disc than before. These new observations, shown in the left image, revealed a gap and a ring that had been obscured in previous observations, suggesting that MP Mus might have company after all. Meanwhile, another piece of the puzzle was being revealed in Germany as Miguel Vioque, an astronomer at ESO, studied this same star with the European Space Agency’s (ESA’s) Gaia mission. Vioque noticed something suspicious — the star was wobbling. A bit of gravitational detective work, together with insights from the new disc structures revealed by ALMA, showed that this motion could be explained by the presence of a gas giant exoplanet.  Both teams presented their joint results in a new paper published in Nature Astronomy. In what they describe as “a beautiful merging of two groups approaching the same object from different angles”, they show that MP Mus isn’t so boring after all. Link Research paper in Nature Astronomy

Provider: European Southern Observatory

Image Source: https://www.eso.org/public/images/potw2528a/

Curator: European Southern Observatory, Garching bei München, None, Germany

Image Use Policy: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

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Image Details Image Details

Image Type
Observation
Object Name
MP Mus PDS 66
Subject - Milky Way
Planet > Type > Gas Giant
Star > Circumstellar Material > Disk > Protoplanetary
Eso_potw2528a_1280
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ID
potw2528a
Subject Category
B.1.1.2   B.3.7.2.1  
Subject Name
MP Mus, PDS 66
Credits
ALMA(ESO/NAOJ/NRAO)/A. Ribas et al.
Release Date
2025-07-14T11:00:00
Lightyears
Redshift
Reference Url
https://www.eso.org/public/images/potw2528a/
Type
Observation
Image Quality
Distance Notes
Facility
Instrument
Color Assignment
Band
Bandpass
Central Wavelength
Start Time
Integration Time
Dataset ID
Notes
Coordinate Frame
Equinox
Reference Value
Reference Dimension
3604.0, 1802.0
Reference Pixel
Scale
Rotation
Coordinate System Projection:
Quality
FITS Header
Notes
Creator (Curator)
European Southern Observatory
URL
https://www.eso.org
Name
Email
Telephone
Address
Karl-Schwarzschild-Strasse 2
City
Garching bei München
State/Province
None
Postal Code
D-85748
Country
Germany
Rights
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Publisher
European Southern Observatory
Publisher ID
eso
Resource ID
potw2528a
Metadata Date
2025-04-01T14:06:41+02:00
Metadata Version
1.1
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