Rogue planets may have more in common with stars like our sun than astronomers realized. About 620 light-years from Earth, a ...
ESO's Very Large Telescope has observed a rogue planet and revealed that it is eating up gas and dust from its surroundings ...
CHA 1107-7626 is 5-10 times larger than Jupiter and is rocketing through our galaxy roughly 620 light-years away from Earth.
European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile, with additional data from the James Webb Space Telescope ...
About 620 light years away in the constellation Chamaeleon, a strange planet is devouring everything around it at a furious ...
A planet called Cha 1107-7626 has been observed by astronomers absorbing gas and dust from the surrounding disc at a ...
A young rogue planet about 620 light-years away from Earth has experienced a record-breaking "growth spurt," hoovering up ...
Researchers stunned after spotting rogue planet, Cha 1107-7626, growing at 6 billion tons per second Adolescents have growth spurts that can leave them unrecognizable in a year, but ever heard of a ...
Astronomers have uncovered a runaway feeding frenzy in a rogue planet drifting freely through space, devouring six billion tonnes of gas and dust every second. Located 620 light-years away in the ...
Astronomers say the rogue planet is devouring dust and gas at six billion tonnes per second - behaviour usually seen in stars ...
Observing the object over several months, they found it flared up dramatically. It's gobbling up 6 billion tonnes of mass per ...
Rogue planets live by their own rules, freely floating through the cosmos without being bound to a star. With no stellar ...