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A New Planet Spotted by the James Webb Telescope
EarthWednesday, June 25, 2025
The disk around TWA 7 is divided into three rings. One of these rings is narrow and has two empty lanes with little matter. When the JWST looked at this ring, it saw an infrared-emitting source. Scientists think this is the young exoplanet TWA 7b. They used simulations to confirm this. The simulations showed a thin ring and a "hole" exactly where the planet is. This matches what the JWST saw.
The JWST is great at finding young, low-mass planets like TWA 7b. These planets emit infrared radiation, which the JWST is very sensitive to. Finding these planets is hard because they are often drowned out by the light from their parent stars. But the JWST has a tool called a coronagraph. This tool blocks out the light from the central stars. This allows the faint infrared emissions of the orbiting exoplanets to be detected.
This is a big deal. TWA 7b is the lowest mass planet ever imaged and the first exoplanet discovered by the JWST. But this is just the beginning. The JWST is powerful and will likely find many more planets. It will image even lighter worlds in the future.
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