NASA's Hubble Reveals Two Dust Disks Around Nearby Star

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June 27, 2006

Erica Hupp/Dwayne Brown 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1237/1726 

Donna Weaver 
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Md. 
410-338-4493 

RELEASE: 06-250

NASA'S HUBBLE REVEALS TWO DUST DISKS AROUND NEARBY STAR

NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has revealed two dust disks circling the 
nearby star Beta Pictoris. The images confirm a decade of scientific 
speculation that a warp in the young star's dust disk may actually be 
a second inclined disk, which is evidence for the possibility of at 
least one Jupiter-size planet orbiting the star. 

The disk is fainter than the star because, at the visible wavelengths 
measured, its dust only reflects light. To see the faint disk, 
astronomers used Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys' coronagraph, 
which blocked the light from Beta Pictoris. The images clearly show a 
distinct secondary disk that is tilted by about four degrees from the 
main disk. The secondary disk is visible out to roughly 24 billion 
miles from the star, and probably extends even farther. The finding 
appears in the June 2006 issue of the Astronomical Journal. 

The best explanation for the observations is that a suspected unseen 
planet, up to 20 times the mass of Jupiter and in an orbit within the 
secondary disk, is using gravity to sweep up material from the 
primary disk. 

"The Hubble observation shows that it is not simply a warp in the dust 
disk but two concentrations of dust in two separate disks," said lead 
astronomer David Golimowski of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. 
"The finding suggests that planets could be forming in two different 
planes. We know this can happen because the planets in our solar 
system are typically inclined to Earth's orbit by several degrees. 
Perhaps stars forming more than one dust disk may be the norm in the 
formative years of a star system." 

Computer models by David Mouillet and Jean-Charles Augereau of 
Grenoble Observatory in France suggest how a secondary dust disk can 
form. A massive planet in an inclined orbit gravitationally attracts 
small bodies of rock and/or ice, called planetesimals, from the main 
disk, and moves them into an orbit aligned with that of the planet. 

These perturbed planetesimals then collide with each other, producing 
the tilted dust disk seen in the new Hubble images. 

"The actual lifetime of a dust grain is relatively short, maybe a few 
hundred thousand years," Golimowski said. "So the fact that we can 
still see these disks around a 10- to 20-million-year-old star means 
that the dust is being replenished by collisions between 
planetesimals." 

Astronomers do not know how the massive planet, if it exists, settled 
into an inclined orbit. However, computer simulations by multiple 
research teams show planet embryos, which start out in a very thin 
plane, can, through gravitational interactions, scatter into orbits 
that become inclined to the primary disk. 

Beta Pictoris is located 63 light-years away in the southern 
constellation Pictor. Although the star is much younger than the sun, 
it is twice as massive and nine times more luminous. Beta Pictoris 
entered the limelight more than 20 years ago when the multinational 
Infrared Astronomical Satellite detected excess infrared radiation 
from the star. Astronomers attributed this excess to the presence of 
warm dust in a disk around the star. The dust disk was first imaged 
by ground-based telescopes in 1984. The images showed the disk is 
seen nearly edge-on from Earth. Hubble observations in 1995 revealed 
an apparent warp in the disk. Subsequent images obtained in 2000 by 
Hubble's Imaging Spectrograph confirmed the warp. 

The latter study was led by Sara Heap of NASA's Goddard Space Flight 
Center in Greenbelt, Md. Heap and her colleagues suggested the 
apparent warp may be an unresolved secondary disk tilted about four 
degrees from the main disk. Several teams of astronomers attributed 
the warp to a planet in a tilted orbit out of the plane of the main 
disk. 

Astronomers using ground-based telescopes also found various 
asymmetries in the star's disk. Infrared images taken in 2002 by the 
Keck II Observatory in Hawaii showed that another smaller inner disk 
may exist around the star in a region the size of our solar system. 
Golimowski's team did not spot the inner disk because it is small and 
blocked by the Advanced Camera's coronagraph. This possible inner 
disk is tilted in the opposite direction from the disk seen in the 
new Hubble images. This misalignment implies the tilted disks are not 
directly related. Nevertheless, they both may bolster evidence for 
the existence of one or more planets orbiting the star. 

Images and more information about Beta Pictoris are available at: 

http://hubblesite.org/news/2006/25 

The Hubble Space Telescope is an international cooperative project 
between NASA and the European Space Agency. The Space Telescope 
Science Institute is operated for NASA by the Association of 
Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., Washington. 

	
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