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An international team of astronomers discovered a giant exoplanet named TOI-6894b orbiting a red dwarf star called TOI-6894, ...
TOI-6894 is one such star. Announced Wednesday in a paper for Nature Astronomy, the red dwarf is just 20% the mass of our Sun ...
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Some astronomers think they've spotted a new dwarf planetSome scientists think they discovered a new dwarf planet at the edge of the solar system, so far away that it takes around 25,000 years to complete one orbit around the sun. Astrophysicist Dr. Paul ...
Astronomers have spotted a cosmic mismatch that has left them perplexed - a really big planet orbiting a really small star.
The host star, TOI-6894, is a red dwarf with only 20% the mass of the Sun, typical of the most common stars in our galaxy.
Giant planets are not rare per se — after all, we have four in our own solar system. Such large worlds are, however, rarely ...
It had not been thought possible that such tiny, weak stars could provide the conditions needed to form and host huge planets.
A small red dwarf star, TOI-6894, is defying astronomers' expectations by having a gas giant planet in its orbit.
With its low density and unusually cool, methane-rich atmosphere, this planet offers a rare window into giant planet formation around small stars.
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Star TOI-6894 is just like many in our galaxy, a small red dwarf, and only ~20% of the mass of our sun. Like many small stars ...
A giant conundrum has been found orbiting a teeny tiny red dwarf star just a fifth of the size of the Sun. Such small stars ...
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