WASP-107b

A team of European astronomers used recent observations made with the James Webb Space Telescope to study the atmosphere of the nearby exoplanet WASP-107b.

  • They discovered not only water vapour and sulfur dioxide, but even silicate sand clouds.
  • These particles reside within a dynamic atmosphere that exhibits vigorous transport of material.
  • WASP-107b, a unique gaseous exoplanet that orbits a star slightly cooler and less massive than our Sun.
  • The mass of WASP-107b is similar to that of Neptune but its size is much larger than that of Neptune, almost approaching the size of Jupiter.
  • This characteristic renders WASP-107b rather ‘fluffy’ when compared to the gas giant planets within our solar system.
  • The fluffiness of exoplanet WASP-107b enables astronomers to look roughly 50 times deeper into its atmosphere compared to the depth of exploration achieved for a solar-system giant like Jupiter.

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