Thursday, July 16, 2026

This Exoplanet Hid for 10 Years Before Astronomers Finally Found It

The ESO's Very Large Telescope captured this image of the Beta Pictoris system. The newly-imaged exoplanet, Beta Pictoris d, is marked with the white arrow. The star Beta Pictoris is shown with the star symbol. Beta Pictoris b is on the left, while the other star in the system, Beta Pictoris c, is not visible. The horizontal band across the star is the debris disk, made of material left over after planet formation. Image Credit: ESO/B. Sutlieff, M. Bonse et al.

A team of astronomers have discovered a third planet orbiting the star Beta Pictoris. The new planet, Beta Pictoris d, is 100 times fainter than Beta Pictoris b — the first planet discovered in the same system — and is among the lightest exoplanets ever to be imaged from the ground. After spotting the planet using the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope (ESO’s VLT), the team found it had been hiding in archive observations spanning more than a decade.



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