Research news on Free floating planets

Free floating planets as a research area focuses on the detection, characterization, and population statistics of planetary-mass objects that are not gravitationally bound to any star. This field integrates microlensing surveys, deep infrared imaging, and dynamical modeling to constrain their occurrence rate, mass function, and spatial distribution in the Galaxy. Research addresses their formation pathways (e.g., ejection from planetary systems versus isolated collapse), atmospheric and interior properties at very low irradiation, and implications for planet formation theories and cluster dynamics. It also explores their contribution to the Galactic mass budget and the potential overlap with brown dwarfs and other substellar free-floating objects.

Close-in planets act as 'bouncers' to create rogue worlds

Rogue planets sound like rare travelers among the stars, freed from the gravitational constraints of a host system, left to forever wander the interstellar void. But modern models suggest these free floating planets (FFPs) ...

Two suns are better than one—planets thrive around binary stars

Planets may actually form more easily around double stars than around single stars like our sun, according to new research from astrophysicists at the University of Lancashire. Binary stars are common in our galaxy, yet for ...

Can life begin on a moon without a sun?

Free-floating planets, or as they are more commonly known, rogue planets, wander interstellar space completely alone. Saying there might be a lot of them is a bit of an understatement. Recent estimates put the number of rogue ...

Did a rogue planet reshape our solar system?

The giant planets weren't always where we find them today. Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune formed in a more compact configuration and later underwent a violent reshuffling that scattered them to their current positions. ...

Never mind rogue planets—their rogue moons could support life

At a young age, we're told how the sun warms Earth and makes life possible. That idea sticks with most of us for life. But when we want to understand things more thoroughly and we dig more deeply, we learn that Earth has ...

Nearby brown dwarf's 'weather' mapped in unprecedented detail

Researchers at McGill University and collaborating institutions have mapped the atmospheric features of a planetary-mass brown dwarf, a type of space object that is neither a star nor a planet, existing in a category in-between. ...

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