Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Posting-Version: version B 2.10 5/26/83; site ihuxb.UUCP Path: utzoo!linus!decvax!harpo!eagle!mhuxt!mhuxi!cbosgd!ihnp4!ihuxb!alle From: alle@ihuxb.UUCP Newsgroups: net.space Subject: 2nd Solar System Found???? Message-ID: <295@ihuxb.UUCP> Date: Thu, 11-Aug-83 08:39:21 EDT Article-I.D.: ihuxb.295 Posted: Thu Aug 11 08:39:21 1983 Date-Received: Fri, 12-Aug-83 18:02:21 EDT Organization: BTL Naperville, Il. Lines: 59 This is reprinted from The Chicago Tribune of August 10, 1983 Earth finds a new neighbor Scientific snoops believe it's a 2d solar system >From Chicago Tribune Wires Pasadena, Calif. -- Astronomers using an infrared satellite telescope have found the first direct evidence that there may be another solar system in the Milky Way galaxy, scientists announced Tuesday. Don Bane of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory said the Infrared Astronomical Satellite, known as IRAS, found a shell or ring of large particles around Vega, the third brightest star in the sky. "The material could be a solar system at a different stage of development from our own," Bane said. "Because of Vega's relative youth [less than 1 billion years compared with the Sun's 4.6 bilion years], the material around it cannot have reached the same stage of evolution as our solar system." "The discovery, however, does provide the first direct evidence that solid objects of substantial size exist around a star other than the Sun." On a scale of 1 to 10, Bane added, the discovery is "an 8 or a 9." Vega is close to Earth in relation to other stars. It is twice the size of the Sun and 60 times as luminous. It is 26 light-years from Earth, the distance traveled by light in that length of time. The nearest star is 4.3 light-years away. IRAS, which measures the amount of infrared waves, or heat energy, of objects in space, was launched in January as an effort by the United States, Britain and the Netherlands. Its data is received by a tracking center at Rutherford Appleton Laboratories in Chilton, England. H. H. Aumann of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Fred Gillett of Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona were studying Vega as a source for calibrating the telescope on the satellite when they found that the star was much brighter and larger in infrared waves than expected from IRAS observations of similar stars. The scientists determined that the radiation was coming from an extended region around Vega stretching 7.4 billion miles out from the star. That would make its solar system twice the diameter of Earth's. The material is 300 degrees below zero, about the same temperature as particles in the innermost rings of Saturn. Because smaller material would have fallen back into the star, the scientists believe, the particles circling Vega could range from the size of buckshot to the size of a planet. The particles probably were left from Vega's formation and may resemble objects found in Earth's solar system such as asteroids, meteorites and other debris, the scientists said. "The discovery is the first opportunity to study what may be an early solar system [forming] from stellar debris, as our solar system is believed to have formed," Bane said. End of Story What an exciting development!!! Allen England at BTL Naperville, Illinois ihnp4!ihuxb!alle