Skip to main content

This Neptune-like planet has a thick atmosphere and maybe even a tail

Artist’s rendering of TOI-1231 b, a Neptune-like planet about 90 light-years away from Earth.
Artist’s rendering of TOI-1231 b, a Neptune-like planet about 90 light years away from Earth. NASA/JPL-Caltech

Discovering planets beyond our solar system is one thing — we’ve discovered over 4,000 exoplanets so far — but discovering if they might be habitable or if they might have an atmosphere is another. That’s why it’s exciting when researchers discover an exoplanet with a substantial atmosphere, as a group from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and The University of New Mexico did recently.

The planet, TOI-1231 b, is a bit smaller than Neptune and orbits a common type of star called a red dwarf. Using tools including the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) and the Planet Finder Spectrograph (PFS) at Las Campanas Observatory in Chile, the researchers were able to infer information about the planet’s size and characteristics.

“Working with a group of excellent astronomers spread across the globe, we were able to assemble the data necessary to characterize the host star and measure both the radius and mass of the planet,” said lead author Jennifer Burt of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. “Those values, in turn, allowed us to calculate the planet’s bulk density and hypothesize about what the planet is made out of. TOI-1231 b is pretty similar in size and density to Neptune, so we think it has a similarly large, gaseous atmosphere.”

One interesting feature about this planet is that it is relatively cool, with a temperature of 330 Kelvin (140 degrees Fahrenheit), which means that it could have clouds of water in its atmosphere. “TOI-1231 b is one of the only other planets we know of in a similar size and temperature range, so future observations of this new planet will let us determine just how common (or rare) it is for water clouds to form around these temperate worlds,” said Burt.

The researchers infer that there is an atmosphere there due to the planet’s low density. “The low density of TOI-1231b indicates that it is surrounded by a substantial atmosphere rather than being a rocky planet. But the composition and extent of this atmosphere are unknown!” said fellow author Diana Dragomir. “TOI-1231 b could have a large hydrogen or hydrogen-helium atmosphere, or a denser water vapor atmosphere.”

This also means that the planet could have a quirky feature: A tail. According to NASA, due to the speed at which the star system is moving away from Earth, it might be possible to see hydrogen being lost from the planet’s atmosphere and forming a tail in space that could be detected by instruments like Hubble.

In addition, this planet provides a useful point of reference for understanding planets in our own solar system. Most planets discovered using current tools tend to be much hotter, so this cool planet is a handy contrast.

“One of the most intriguing results of the last two decades of exoplanet science is that, thus far, none of the new planetary systems we’ve discovered look anything like our own solar system,” said Burt. “They’re full of planets between the size of Earth and Neptune on orbits much shorter than Mercury’s, so we don’t have any local examples to compare them to. This new planet we’ve discovered is still weird — but it’s one step closer to being somewhat like our neighborhood planets. Compared to most transiting planets detected thus far, which often have scorching temperatures in the many hundreds or thousands of degrees, TOI-1231 b is positively frigid.”

The findings will be published in The Astronomical Journal.

Editors' Recommendations

Georgina Torbet
Georgina is the Digital Trends space writer, covering human space exploration, planetary science, and cosmology. She…
James Webb spots exoplanet with gritty clouds of sand floating in its atmosphere
This illustration conceptualises the swirling clouds identified by the James Webb Space Telescope in the atmosphere of the exoplanet VHS 1256 b. The planet is about 40 light-years away and orbits two stars that are locked in their own tight rotation. Its clouds, which are filled with silicate dust, are constantly rising, mixing, and moving during its 22-hour day.

One of the most exciting things about the James Webb Space Telescope is that not only can it detect exoplanets, but it can even peer into their atmospheres to see what they are composed of. Understanding exoplanet atmospheres will help us to find potentially habitable worlds, but it will also turn up some fascinating oddities -- like a recent finding of an exoplanet with an atmosphere full of gritty, sand clouds.

Exoplanet VHS 1256 b, around 40 light-years away, has a complex and dynamic atmosphere that shows considerable changes over a 22-hour day. Not only does the atmosphere show evidence of commonly observed chemicals like water, methane, and carbon monoxide, but it also appears to be dotted with clouds made up of silicate grains.

Read more
Tiny dwarf planet Quaoar has a mysterious ring
An artist’s impression of the dwarf planet Quaoar and its ring. Quaoar’s moon Weywot is shown on the left.

The European Space Agency's CHEOPS telescope usually searches for planets outside our solar system, but recently it made a discovery closer to home: a large ring around the dwarf planet Quaoar which has researchers intrigued.

An artist’s impression of the dwarf planet Quaoar and its ring. Quaoar’s moon Weywot is shown on the left. Quaoar’s ring was discovered through a series of observations that took place between 2018 to 2021. Using a collection of ground-based telescopes, and ESA’s space-based telescope Cheops, astronomers watched as Quaoar crossed in front of a succession of distant stars, briefly blocking out their light as it passed. ESA; Acknowledgement: Work performed by ATG under contract for ESA

Read more
How James Webb peers into the atmospheres of far-off exoplanets
Illustration of a planet on a black background. The planet is large and rocky. Roughly two-thirds of the planet is lit, while the rest is in shadow.

We are entering a new period of exoplanet astronomy, with a recent announcement that the James Webb Space Telescope has detected its first exoplanet. The promise of Webb is that it will be able to not only spot exoplanets but also study their atmospheres, which would mark a major step forward in exoplanet science.

Studying exoplanets is extremely challenging because they are generally far too far away and too small to be observed directly. Very occasionally, a telescope is able to directly image an exoplanet, but most of the time researchers have to infer that a planet is present by looking at the star around which it orbits. There are several methods for detecting planets based on their effects on a star, but one of the most commonly used is the transit method, in which a telescope observes a star and looks for a very small dip in brightness which happens when a planet passes between the star and us. This is the method Webb used to detect its first exoplanet, named LHS 475 b.

Read more