Possible Volcanic Moon Detected 635 Light-Years Away | NASA/JPL
The existence of exomoons (moons around planets outside our solar system) has long been theorized, but their detection has remained elusive due to their small size and faintness. A new NASA-led study, however, suggests that a potential exomoon may be orbiting the exoplanet WASP-49 b, a gas giant located 635 light-years from Earth. The possible exomoon is believed to be rocky and volcanically active, similar to Jupiter’s moon Io.
The study centers on a sodium cloud near WASP-49 b that was discovered in 2017. It shares characteristics with the gas emissions seen around Io. The scientists tracked the cloud’s motion and the data strongly indicates the presence of a separate orbiting body—an exomoon—as the source.
Further observations are needed to confirm the existence of this potential exomoon. If WASP-49 b indeed hosts a moon similar in size to that of Earth, the exomoon may face a violent fate. Gravitational forces from the exoplanet could eventually cause it to disintegrate.
Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Duration: 2 minutes
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