Located about 340 light years from Earth in the constellation Centaurus, HD 131399Ab is about 16 million years old, making it one of the youngest exoplanets discovered to date, and one of very few directly imaged planets.
With a temperature of about 580 degrees Celsius and weighing about four Jupiter masses, it is also one of the coldest and least massive directly imaged exoplanets.
"For about half of the planet's orbit, which lasts 550 Earth-years, three stars are visible in the sky, the fainter two always much closer together, and changing in apparent separation from the brightest star throughout the year," said Kevin Wagner, a first-year PhD student in Apai's research group, who discovered HD 131399Ab.
"For much of the planet's year the stars appear close together, giving it a familiar night-side and day-side with a unique triple-sunset and sunrise each day," Wagner said.
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Wagner identified the planet among hundreds of candidates and led the follow-up observations to verify its nature.
The planet marks the first discovery of an exoplanet made with SPHERE (Spectro-Polarimetric High-Contrast Exoplanet Research Instrument), one of the world's most advanced instruments dedicated to finding planets around other stars.
The instrument is part of the Very Large Telescope operated by the European Southern Observatory (ESO) in Chile.
All the while, B and C twirl around each other like a spinning dumbbell, separated by a distance roughly equal to that between our Sun and Saturn.
In this scenario, planet HD 131399Ab travels around the central star, A, in an orbit about twice as large as Pluto's if compared to our solar system, and brings the planet to about one-third of the separation of the stars themselves.