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Carbon Dioxide Found in Extraterrestrial Planet by James Webb Telescope

The James Webb Telescope published its first report on the discovery of carbon dioxide in an exoplanet’s atmosphere on August 25th.

The planet is identified as WASP-39b, which is 700 light-years from Earth and has a tremendous mass comparable to Saturn with a diameter that is 1.3 times that of Jupiter. Its typical temperature is near to 900 degrees Celsius, and it orbits its star closely. The atmosphere expands as a result of the high temperature, making it simpler for the Webb telescope to collect the starlight shining on it.

The University of California researchers made sure that the outcomes displayed a distinct signal of carbon dioxide regardless of how it was processed by using several observations and four different algorithms.

A further discovery made by the researchers was that WASP-39b has a higher carbon and oxygen content than its parent star, indicating that it did not form when the gas surrounding the star collapsed suddenly but rather that its rocky core formed first and the gas that makes up its atmosphere was added later. This is consistent with what the scientists now understand about how planets in our solar system develop.

Additionally, the result’s statistical significance is σ26, which according to the experts is unprecedented in this area. This appears to be predestined or perhaps be an exoplanet’s call. Additionally, there is a spike in the data that shows a strange chemical component, the identity of which is unknown, is absorbing some starlight in the atmosphere of WASP-39b.

Searching for the atmospheres of rocky planets like Earth is one of the key objectives of the Webb telescope. The finding might aid in the hunt for extraterrestrial life.

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Translator: OXV Translation Team
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