Good morning! Congratulations
on completing the first 9 installments of your tour. We don’t have as many
worlds to visit as yesterday, so there will be ample time to relax. If you want
a pillow or beverage, press the blue button on your arm rest, and either CXQ-9
or CXQ-10 will tend to you. Now, if everybody is comfortable, we’ll get
started.
Excuse me. I’m sorry
to disturb you, but we are entering the system of today’s first planet. If you
turn your attention to your viewers, currently on their maximum magnification,
you’ll see a small deep-pink blob. This is GJ-504b, the Pink Planet, 57.3 light years
from Earth. The dark pink glow of GJ-504b is caused by the remaining heat of
its formation. It’s about the same size as Jupiter, but it’s further from its
sun than Neptune is from ours. Scientists didn’t think such a large planet
could form at that distance because there wouldn’t be enough dust and debris.
Your viewers will adjust their magnification as we approach and swing past, so
you can get a good look.
Your attention,
please. We are now 434 light-years from Earth, approaching planet J1407B, which is described as a
‘Super-Saturn’. It has a mass of 40 Jupiters and 37 rings surround it, spanning
120 million kilometres. That’s about 200 times the size of Saturn’s rings. Some
scientists think these rings may be in the process of forming moons, which has
them quite excited, since they’ve never seen that happen outside of our solar
system. Actually, even within our
system, we haven’t seen it happen.
CXQ-9 and -10 will
serve brunch as we move on, complete with champagne! Enjoy!
Good afternoon! Your
viewers are currently showing KOI-314c, the lightest planet to have both
its mass and physical size measured. Rather surprisingly, it has the same mass
as Earth, but is 60% larger in diameter. If you weigh 100 pounds on Earth, you
will still weigh 100 pounds on KOI-314c. However, the larger diameter seems to
indicate a very thick atmosphere. If you look slightly to the left of the
planet’s image, you’ll see the red dwarf star that it orbits. This system is
about 200 light-years from Earth. Yes, we are already headed back to the tour
station.
This is our final
viewing for today. This is Epsilon Eridani b, which orbits an orange Sun-like star only 10.5 light years from
Earth. Before long, Earth telescopes may be able to photograph it directly.
Unfortunately, it is too far from its star to have liquid water or life as we
know it. However, I’m going I’ll make a couple low orbits around it and set
your viewers on maximum, and you can all try to spot life as we don’t know it!
Ladies and Gentlemen,
we have returned to the tour station. I hope you have enjoyed your day with
Star Tours. Er, I mean, Planet Tours.
http://www.popularmechanics.com/space/deep-space/g1265/space-oddities-8-of-the-strangest-exoplanets/
http://www.express.co.uk/news/science/643662/The-10-weirdest-planets-to-have-been-discovered-so-far
www.space.com/159-strangest-alien-planets.html