A former Brineller made number 11 out of Discover magazine's
top 100 science stories of 2003, listed in the January 2004
issue. At first, scientists thought that an object orbiting a
pulsar in globular cluster M4 was simply a small star or brown
dwarf. Steinn Sigurdsson and his colleagues at Pennsylvania
State University determined that it is actually the oldest and
most distant known planet in the universe, formed 12.7 billion
years ago, only about one billion years after the Big Bang.
The planet is a gas giant over twice the mass of Jupiter,
currently orbiting a pulsar after a long, complicated history
of switching dance partners. :-) The discovery suggests that
life could have evolved 5 or 6 billion years earlier than
anyone expected.

Discover's web site won't show this issue online for a few
months, but Steinn's site has more information about the
discovery:

    http://www.astro.psu.edu/users/steinn/
______________________________________________________________________
Steve Sloan ......... Huntsville, Alabama =========> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Brin-L list pages .............................. http://www.brin-l.org
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3D and Drawing Galleries .................. http://www.sloansteady.com
Software ................ Science Fiction, Science, and Computer Links
Science fiction scans ......................... http://www.sloan3d.com


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