http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/extrasolar_blowout_040202.html

Astronomers have detected the first presence of oxygen and carbon in
the atmosphere of an extrasolar planet, a world already known to be
venting massive amounts of gas into space.

The find is evidence of an atmospheric "blow off" in action, where
energetic hydrogen gas drags heavier elements along for a supersonic
ride into space.

"If you imagine a wind so efficient that it takes everything with it,
sand particles for instance, you get the idea," said the study's
leader Alfred Vidal-Madjar, of the Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris.
The planet "is really losing a lot of material even more efficiently
than we thought before."

Despite the oxygen, the faraway planet is not one that would support
life.

Dismembering

The Jupiter-like planet is officially called HD 209458b, though
Vidal-Madjar's team has nicknamed it Osiris after an Egyptian god who
was dismembered by his brother Seth. It orbits a Sun-like star 150
light-years from Earth.

Astronomers already knew the planet was rapidly losing its atmosphere
after a previous study led by Vidal-Madjar found it spewing out enough
hydrogen gas to create an envelope that extended and trailed the
extrasolar world.

The planet was thought to be losing at least 10,000 tons of material
each second, but researchers weren't sure the process was powerful
enough to dredge up heavier elements.

Carbon and oxygen atoms are 10 times heavier than those of hydrogen,
and therefore would normally lie low in a planet's atmosphere,
explained Gilda Ballester, a University of Arizona astronomer who took
part in the study. "So a force stronger than gravity is driving them
up along with the hydrogen gas into the extended envelope around this
planet," she said.

The cause

The venting process has been attributed to a pair of reasons, namely
the intense gravitational forces between the planet and its parent
star, as well as the super-hot temperature of the planet's atmosphere.
HD 209458b circles its stellar parent every 3.5 days from a distance
of just 4.4 million miles (7 million kilometers), which is closer than
Mercury's orbit around the Sun.

The tight orbit causes intense gravitational tiding that stretches the
planet's atmosphere into an oval shape, not unlike a rugby ball, which
can allow gas to escape. The upper atmosphere itself is baked up to
18,000 degrees Fahrenheit (10,000 degrees Celsius), which forces
hydrogen atoms to expand outward at supersonic speeds.

The hydrogen wind erupts away from the planet like a geyser and is
powerful enough to sweep up carbon and oxygen with it.

The planet may eventually shed its entire atmosphere, leaving behind
only a solid core remnant of its once massive self. The unique nature
of this process has led Vidal-Madjar's team to propose the existence
of a new class of extrasolar planets, one which may be populated by
the remains of worlds that have shed their atmospheric skins and orbit
even closer to their suns than HD 209458b.

The process is similar to one that may have eventually produced the
atmospheres around more local planets, such as Venus and Earth,
astronomers said.

"The composition of Earth's atmosphere today is so peculiar, that
there must exist an efficient process that blew out much of the
original material," Vidal-Madjar told SPACE.com. "Now we are directly
observing it in Osiris."

More to learn

The next step, Vidal-Madjar says, is to search for even heavier
elements, such as iron, in the envelope around HD 209458b, which would
go further in confirming the blow out process.

Vidal-Madjar's team used the Hubble Space Telescope to observe HD
209458b between October and November in 2003. Since the planet
partially eclipses its parent star - HD 209458 - during each orbit,
researchers can to probe its atmospheric makeup during the transit.
The new research will appear in an upcoming issue of the Astrophysical
Journal Letters.

HD 209458b orbits a star in the constellation Pegasus, which can be
seen with binoculars from the ground. The planet was first detected in
1999 using the wobble method of planet hunting. A separate team of
astronomers previously detected sodium in the planet's atmosphere as
well.



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