Deadly Planets
By Patrick L. Barry and Dr. Tony Phillips
About 900 light years from here is a rocky planet not much bigger than Earth. It goes around its star once every hundred days, a trifle fast, but not too different from a standard Earth-year. At least two and possibly three other planets circle the same star, forming a complete solar system.
Interested? Don't be. Going there would be the last thing you ever do.
The star is a pulsar, PSR 1257+12, the seething-hot core of a supernova that
exploded millions of years ago. Its planets are bathed not in gentle,
life-giving sunshine but instead a blistering torrent of X-rays and high-energy
particles.
"It would be like trying to live next to
Our own Sun emits small amounts of pulsar-like X-rays and high energy particles, but the amount of such radiation coming from a pulsar is "orders of magnitude more," he says. Even for a planet orbiting as far out as the Earth, this radiation could blow away the planet's atmosphere, and even vaporize sand right off the planet's surface.
Astronomer Alex Wolszczan discovered planets around
PSR 1257+12 in the 1990s using
NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope may have found the solution.
In 2005, a group of astronomers led by Deepto Chakrabarty of MIT pointed the infrared telescope toward
pulsar 4U 0142+61. Data revealed a disk of gas and dust surrounding the central
star, probably wreckage from the supernova. It was just the sort of disk that could
coalesce to form planets!
As deadly as pulsar planets are, they might also be hauntingly beautiful. The
vaporized matter rising from the planets' surfaces could be ionized by the
incoming radiation, creating colorful auroras across the sky. And though the pulsar
would only appear as a tiny dot in the sky (the pulsar itself is only 20-40 km
across), it would be enshrouded in a hazy glow of light emitted by radiation
particles as they curve in the pulsar's strong magnetic field.
Wasted beauty? Maybe. Beichman
points out the positive: "It's an awful place to try and form planets, but
if you can do it there, you can do it anywhere."
Find more news and images from Spitzer at http://www.spitzer.caltech.edu/ . In addition, The Space Place Web site features several games related to Spitzer and infrared astronomy, as well as a storybook about a girl who creamed of finding another Earth. Go to http://tiny.cc/lucy208.
This article was provided by the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

Caption:
Artist’s concept of a
pulsar and surrounding disk of rubble called a “fallback” disk, out of which
new planets could form.
Note to editors:
You may download this
image from http://spaceplace.nasa.gov/news_images/pulsar_system_art.jpg .