Hypervelocity star drags fastest exoplanet through space at 1.2 million mph

Is it a bird? Is it a plane? No, it’s super Neptune! But this Superman-mimicking planet is not blasting through space on its own. It is being dragged along by its parent star.

NASA scientists have discovered what they suspect is the hypervelocity star racing through space with a Neptune-like planet in tow. The system appears to be moving at an incredible speed of 1.2 million miles per hour (1.9 million kilometers per hour). If the discovery is confirmed, this will be the fastest extrasolar planet, “exoplanet,” system ever seen.

“We think this is a so-called super-Neptune world orbiting a low-mass star at a distance that would lie between the orbits of Venus and Earth if it were in our solar system,” said team leader Sean Terry, a researcher at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. “If so, it will be the first planet ever found orbiting a hypervelocity star.”

The star and the planet it drags along with it were first hinted at in data collected way back in 2011 thanks to a chance alignment and a phenomenon first predicted by Albert Einstein in 1915 in his magnum opus theory, general relativity.

An infographic explains the ins and outs of gravitational lensing. (Image credit: Robert Lea/NASA, ESA & L. Calçada)

Gravitational lensing becomes useful to planet-hunters when planets pass background stars not associated with them. The way these planets warp space causes a tiny shift in the stars’ position when seen from Earth.

A diagram shows an exaggerated mini-gravitational lensing situation. (Image credit: Robert Lea (created with Canva))

This effect, called “microlensing,” can therefore be used to detect otherwise dark planets way beyond the limits of the solar system that are effectively invisible using traditional light-based astronomy.

A star and its planet or a planet and its moon?

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