Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known
Founder: spacedriver
Contributors: crookedindifference, rocketmagic, propagandery, rostenbach, bumerangue, ummwhat
Catching Elephant is a theme by Andy Taylor
What causes rogue planets to run away from their stars?
We now estimate that every star in the galaxy has at least one planet, but that is leaving aside the potentially billions more planets that were ejected from their solar system and are now hurtling through the universe all alone.
We know that these rogue planets exist - indeed, they could outnumber all the other planets in the galaxy by a factor of two or three to one, and our own solar system possibly once had a fifth gas planet that went walkabout. The question, then, is why all these planets form around stars and then up and leave their home solar systems. The most common explanation had been that their orbits became gravitationally unstable, and while that’s likely still a part of the story, some rather more unusual possibilities are now being considered, thanks to some nifty new computer simulations by researchers at Cambridge and the University of Bordeaux.
Artist’s conception of rogue planet via NASA/JPL.