Webb Telescope Study Reveals White-Dwarf Planet Insights into Solar System’s Future
Astronomers from the University of St Andrews used the James Webb Space Telescope to observe the transit of the Jupiter-sized exoplanet WD 1856 b across a white dwarf star, measuring its mass, temperature and atmospheric properties. Yahoo reported that the observations showed the planet orbiting very close to the white dwarf, enabling direct determination of its physical parameters. Analysis of the transit data revealed the planet’s mass and temperature and detected signatures of an atmosphere, representing one of the few detailed characterizations of a planet around a stellar remnant.
The researchers argued that such a system demonstrates how planets can survive and migrate after their host stars die, offering a glimpse of the distant future of Earth and the outer Solar System. The results were published in Nature, providing the astronomical community with new constraints on planetary evolution following stellar death.