logo
What would it be like living on Tatooine from 'Star Wars'? This exoplanet orbiting twin suns could tell us

What would it be like living on Tatooine from 'Star Wars'? This exoplanet orbiting twin suns could tell us

Yahoo04-05-2025

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
A Tatooine-like world with a key difference from the desert planet in "Star Wars" has been serendipitously discovered orbiting not two stars, but a pair of brown dwarfs. What's more, this wacky planet doesn't orbit around the brown dwarfs' equator, but instead up and down over their poles.
In the "Star Wars" universe, Luke Skywalker famously came from the planet of Tatooine, which had two suns and double sunsets. Tatooine is in a circumbinary orbit, which means that it doesn't orbit one star, but instead orbits both stars of a binary system.
Binary systems are common in our Milky Way galaxy — about two-thirds of all stars (and brown dwarfs) are found in binary systems. Yet given the near ubiquity of these stellar pairs, very few planets have been discovered on circumbinary orbits — just 16 up until now.
Those 16 all orbit around the equatorial plane of their double star system — such orbits are said to be 'co-planar'. This is just one of the reasons that this new Tatooine-like planet, which is 118 light years away and called 2M1510(AB)b, is rather unique.
Another reason is that it orbits two brown dwarfs (which also happen to eclipse each other from our point of view, and are only the second pair of eclipsing brown dwarfs to have been found). Brown dwarfs are sometimes referred to as 'failed stars' — they are objects that form like a star by collapsing directly out of a molecular gas cloud, but which are not massive enough to generate the temperatures and pressures required at their core for hydrogen-based fusion reactions.
The concept of planets on polar orbits isn't entirely surprising. Previous studies have discovered planets on polar orbits around single stars, while the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile has observed dusty protoplanetary disks tilted around young binary stars. However, 2M1510(AB)b is the first bonafide planet to be found on a circumbinary polar orbit.
"Our expectation is that the planet would have formed in an inclined disc, such as those observed by ALMA," said Amaury Triaud, a professor of astronomy at the University of Birmingham, UK, in an interview with Space.com. Triaud was part of the research team that discovered this planet.
There are, however, some caveats. One is the planet's distance from the brown dwarfs, which at this current time is unknown. If it is too far away, then the disk from which it formed would have been harder to tilt. In this case, alternative ideas would have to be considered, such as an interaction with a passing star.
We don't know the orbital period of 2M1510(AB)b, nor its diameter and mass, because this planet wasn't discovered in a conventional way. Triaud is part of a team led by Thomas Baycroft, who is a PhD student at Birmingham. They were targeting the brown dwarfs with the Very Large Telescope in Chile, with the aim of constraining the two brown dwarf's orbital parameters around each other.
But they began to notice the very subtle effect of the brown dwarfs being tugged this way and that by an unseen body. Putting their data into various models, they found that the best explanation is that of a large planet, between 10 and 100 times the mass of Earth, on a polar orbit aligned 90 degrees to the equatorial plane of the brown dwarfs.
Intriguingly, a circumbinary polar orbit is more stable than a co-planar orbit, says Triaud. This is not necessarily the case for planets on polar orbits around single stars.
"We still do not fully understand why certain planets orbiting single stars are on polar orbits, and since what we've found is the first polar circumbinary geometry, we also do not know much about it," he said. "For single stars, the planetary orbit could have misaligned, or the stellar rotation axis could have moved. A final scenario, which I am very skeptical about, is that polar planets orbiting single stars were once circumbinary planets themselves, with the two stars coalescing."
Audiences have been wowed over the years by Tatooine's double sunset in Star Wars, and planets in circumbinary orbits do have different diurnal and seasonal patterns compared to Earth. On a circumbinary planet, the length of day would depend upon how far apart the stars are in the sky at any one time. At their widest angular separation, the days would last longer than when the stars are close together in the sky.
Also think about their orbits. The two stars are orbiting the center of mass between them, and a circumbinary planet orbits both stars as they move about this center of mass. As the planet orbits around them, it will at different times find itself closer to one star than the other, and at other times be equidistant to both stars. This dance of stars and planet would undoubtedly have an effect on the planet's climate.
"A circumbinary planet experiences a sort of seasonal modulation, on roughly the timescale of the binary orbit, or half of it," said Triaud.
There's lots of potential permutations here. If both stars are of similar mass, then the planet will experience winter when it is closer to just one of them, and summer when they are equidistant. If they have different masses, say a sun-like star and a cool, feeble red dwarf, then the warmer seasons would occur when a circumbinary planet is closer to the more massive star. It's even plausible that a planet could dip in and out of the habitable zone — it would be inside the habitable zone when it's closer to the more massive star, and out when it is nearer the smaller, cooler star.
But how would a circumbinary planet on a polar orbit fare?
"A polar planet would also feel a little like this since the stars constantly move and change distance relative to the planet, but the effect would be reduced compared to a co-planar situation," said Triaud.
RELATED STORIES:
— New Tatooine-like exoplanet discovered orbiting twin suns. Meet BEBOP-1c.
— How common are Tatooine worlds?
— Astronomers discover doomed planet shedding a Mount Everest's worth of material every orbit, leaving behind a comet-like tail
The 2M1510 system also has a third brown dwarf farther out that the planet does not orbit. It is unlikely that there would be life on 2M1510(AB)b — brown dwarfs are far too cool to keep a planet warm enough for liquid water.
Luke Skywalker's homeworld of Tatooine is a dry desert world, with very subtle seasons. During the double sunset, we see two sun-like stars close together. Perhaps they are on a tight orbit around one another, meaning their distance from the planet stays fairly similar. Luke found life on Tatooine to be boring, but he should be glad, because as we have seen, binary stars have the potential to play all kinds of havoc on their orbiting circumbinary planets.
The discovery of this first-ever circumbinary polar planet was published on April 16 in Science Advances.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

FAA requires SpaceX to investigate Starship Flight 9 mishap
FAA requires SpaceX to investigate Starship Flight 9 mishap

Yahoo

time16 hours ago

  • Yahoo

FAA requires SpaceX to investigate Starship Flight 9 mishap

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. SpaceX needs to figure out what happened on the ninth test flight of its Starship megarocket, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has decreed. Flight 9, which lifted off from SpaceX's Starbase site in South Texas on Tuesday (May 27), ended in the destruction of both of Starship's stages — its Super Heavy booster and Ship upper stage (which is also sometimes known, somewhat confusingly, as Starship). But the FAA, which grants launch licenses for U.S. operators, is only concerned about one of those explosive events. "The mishap investigation is focused only on the loss of the Starship vehicle, which did not complete its launch or reentry as planned," FAA officials wrote in an update today (May 30). "The FAA determined that the loss of the Super Heavy booster is covered by one of the approved test induced damage exceptions requested by SpaceX for certain flight events and system components," the agency explained. "The FAA evaluated each exception prior to launch approval and verified they met public safety requirements." SpaceX broke new ground on Flight 9, reusing a Super Heavy for the first time ever. This particular booster first flew on Flight 7 in January, acing its engine burn and then returning to Starbase for a successful and dramatic catch by the launch tower's "chopstick" arms. The company did not attempt another catch on Flight 9. It conducted a variety of experiments with the booster, including bringing it down to Earth on a higher "angle of attack" to increase atmospheric drag. So, for safety's sake, SpaceX steered Super Heavy toward a "hard splashdown" in the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday. This didn't quite work out, however. "Contact with the booster was lost shortly after the start of landing burn when it experienced a rapid unscheduled disassembly approximately 6 minutes after launch, bringing an end to the first reflight of a Super Heavy booster," SpaceX wrote in a Flight 9 recap. Ship had an even harder time on Flight 9. The upper stage was supposed to make a soft splashdown in the Indian Ocean off the coast of Western Australia about 65 minutes after launch, but it suffered an "attitude control error" that prevented the vehicle from getting into the proper orientation for reentry. "Starship then went through an automated safing process to vent the remaining pressure to place the vehicle in the safest condition for reentry," SpaceX wrote in the recap. "Contact with Starship was lost approximately 46 minutes into the flight, with all debris expected to fall within the planned hazard area in the Indian Ocean." Related stories: — SpaceX reached space with Starship Flight 9 launch, then lost control of its giant spaceship (video) — Starship and Super Heavy explained — SpaceX loses Starship rocket stage again, but catches giant Super Heavy booster during Flight 8 launch (video) This was still a considerable improvement over Ship's performance on its previous two liftoffs. On both Flight 7 and Flight 8 (which launched in March), Ship was lost less than 10 minutes after liftoff, raining debris down over the Atlantic. There have been no reports of injuries or damage to public property as a result of the Flight 9 mishap, according to the FAA. There were also minimal effects on flights in U.S. airspace — an improvement over the previous two Starship launches. "The FAA activated a Debris Response Area, out of an abundance of caution, when the Super Heavy booster experienced its anomaly over the Gulf of America during its flyback toward Texas," FAA officials wrote. "The FAA subsequently determined the debris did not fall outside of the hazard area," they added. "During the event, there were zero departure delays, one flight was diverted, and one airborne flight was held for 24 minutes."

Pacific spiny lumpsucker: The adorable little fish with a weird suction cup resembling human teeth
Pacific spiny lumpsucker: The adorable little fish with a weird suction cup resembling human teeth

Yahoo

time17 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Pacific spiny lumpsucker: The adorable little fish with a weird suction cup resembling human teeth

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. QUICK FACTS Name: Pacific spiny lumpsucker (Eumicrotremus orbis) Where it lives: Northern Pacific, from Washington to Japan and north into the Bering Sea What it eats: Small fish, jellyfish, ctenophores, crustaceans, polychaetes Pacific spiny lumpsuckers' tiny, plump bodies and adorable appearance make them essentially wild kawaii. They are awkward swimmers, so to avoid being swept off by currents in their coastal homes, their pelvic fin has evolved to act as a suction cup, enabling them to anchor themselves to a stable surface. At just 1 to 3 inches (2.5 to 7.6 centimeters) long, they are the smallest of the 27 species of lumpsuckers, also called lumpfish, some of which can grow as long as two feet (61 cm). Lumpfish are in the same order, Scorpaeniformes, as blobfish, sea robins and stonefish. Pacific spiny lumpsuckers are small, globular fish with extra-small fins which they flap wildly to get around. It makes them able-but-awkward swimmers. Living close to the coast and facing the pulls of tides and strong currents, their pelvic fins are fused to form a surprisingly strong sucker disc which lets them attach to rocks, coral or kelp, and, in aquariums, even to the side of a tank. These sucker discs are a bit fearsome to look at from the underside – like a lamprey with a circle of human teeth. That's because, like our teeth, those of the Pacific spiny lumpsucker are made from enamel. The disc also emits a green and yellow glow — though the reasons for this are not known. Males are usually red (see 'concerned strawberries') and glow red under ultraviolet light, while females are usually green to brown and don't glow under UV rays. RELATED STORIES —Pelican eel: The midnight zone 'gulper' with a giant mouth to swallow animals bigger than itself —Pearlfish: The eel-like fish that lives up a sea cucumber's butt —Pigbutt worm: The deep-sea 'mystery blob' with the rump of a pig and a ballooned belly When it's time to reproduce, only the males settle down. They stake out a territory, usually a shallow depression in warmer water where the females lay their eggs. The male fertilizes them and then she leaves and he tends to and guards the next generation from lumpsuckers don't yet have a defense the adults have — rows of enamel bumps called odontodes covering their bodies, including that toothy-looking circle on their undersides. Eventually, they will grow odontodes in spiral rows all around their bodies to protect them against predators and collisions with rough surfaces.

June's full 'Strawberry Moon' illuminates the night sky next week: Here's how to see it
June's full 'Strawberry Moon' illuminates the night sky next week: Here's how to see it

Yahoo

time20 hours ago

  • Yahoo

June's full 'Strawberry Moon' illuminates the night sky next week: Here's how to see it

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. This month's full "Strawberry Moon" graces the night sky on June 11, putting on a spectacular show as the fully-lit disk of Earth's natural satellite rides low over the southeastern horizon. A full moon occurs each month when the moon is positioned opposite the sun in Earth's sky, which allows the lunar disk to be fully lit from our perspective. June's full moon is commonly referred to as the "Strawberry Moon" in America, but the nickname isn't a reference to its color (though there's a decent chance it will take on a yellow-orange hue when near the horizon due to our atmosphere's habit of scattering certain wavelengths of light). Rather, the evocative name is thought to have been coined by the Native American Algonquian tribes in reference to the short strawberry harvesting season that falls around this time of year, according to the Old Farmer's Almanac. Other cultures have dubbed the event the Blooming Moon, Green Corn Moon, Birth Moon and Hatching moon, to name a few. Regardless of what you call it, one thing is certain: June's full moon is sure to put on a spectacular display when it lights up the night sky next week. This month's full moon phase will occur during the early hours of June 11 for viewers in New York, at 3:44 a.m. EDT (0744 GMT). The exact timing of the event will vary depending on your location on Earth, so be sure to check a trusted website such as for specifics about your locale. The lunar disk will appear fully lit to stargazers across America when it rises above the southeastern horizon at sunset on June 10, marking the best opportunity for the astrophotography community to capture the Strawberry Moon close to the horizon. Earth's natural satellite will appear particularly large to the naked eye at moonrise thanks to the little-understood "moon illusion," a strange effect wherein the human brain convinces us that objects are larger than they actually are when in close proximity to the horizon. Each year, June's full moon treads a predictably low path across the spring sky due to its close proximity to the summer solstice — the time of the year when the sun is at its highest. This year's Strawberry Moon will ride exceptionally low — the lowest in decades according to stargazing site — thanks in part to a phenomenon that sees the moon's tilted orbit dragged around by the sun's gravitational influence. Editor's Note: If you snap a picture of the full 'Strawberry Moon' and want to share it with readers, then please send your photo along with comments about the shoot, your name and location to spacephotos@

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store