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Controversial 'JuMBO' planets discovered by James Webb telescope may not be an illusion after all

Live Science Abha Jain 1 переглядів 7 хв читання
Controversial 'JuMBO' planets discovered by James Webb telescope may not be an illusion after all
A view of a purple star-scape with blue and orange stars.
The Lower Centaurus-Crux association, where the new Jupiter-size object pairs dwell. Dominated by blue stars, it lies 385 light-years away from us. (Image credit: Roberto Mura, Public Domain)
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A mysterious new kind of celestial object discovered by the James Webb telescope just inched closer to reality, a new study reports.

Looking within a large stellar nursery in the southern sky, astronomers found two pairs of "rogue" Jupiter-like objects that are similar to mysteriously paired planets that the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) previously discovered. The planet pairs — which tumble through space, seemingly untethered to any star — dwell in a different part of the Milky Way than JWST's initial discoveries, suggesting that the enigmatic objects truly are a new kind of object. However, further observations are still necessary for confirmation.

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Cáceres, C., Minniti, D., Mejías, A., Gomez, M., Alonso-García, J., Ivanov, V., Pullen, J., Saito, R., Smith, L., Solano, E., Beamín, J., Rojas-Bozza, D., Soto, P. and Zelada, R. (2026). Discovery of Planetary-Mass Binaries in the Lower Centaurus-Crux association. Astronomy & Astrophysics, 708, A378. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202347673

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Abha Jain
Abha JainLive Science contributor

Abha Jain is a freelance science writer. She did a masters degree in biology, specializing in neuroscience, from the Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, India, and is almost through with a bachelor's degree in archaeology from the University of Leicester, UK. She's also a self-taught space enthusiast, and so loves writing about topics in astronomy, archaeology and neuroscience.

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