|   | 
Credit: JPL-Caltech,    
NASA   
   
Explanation:
Can a planet be as large as the star that it orbits?   
   
Recent observations have discovered that nearby    
Van Biesbroeck's star    
might have just such a large planet.     
   
Although VB 10 lies only about 20    
light years away, it is a small    
red dwarf star so dim,    
at 17th magnitude, that a telescope is needed to see it.   
   
Van Biesbroeck's star   
was previously known for its rapid    
proper motion    
across the sky -- it moves so fast it could cross a    
full moon in only about 1,000 years.   
   
By noting a wiggle   
in VB 10's sky trajectory,    
astronomers were able to infer the existence of a    
planet several times the mass of    
Jupiter.   
   
Although the star VB 10 is perhaps 10 times more massive than the discovered planet   
VB 10b,    
the star is likely more highly compressed and so the two might be closely matched   
in size.   
   
Such a system is    
envisioned above   
with an artist's illustration.   
   
Since faint M-type stars like VB 10 are so common,    
planetary systems surrounding   
them, including planets larger than their parent star,    
might be more common than planetary systems like our own    
Solar System.   
   
   
    
 Free Lecture:     
An APOD editor will review great space images this Friday in Kalamazoo, Michigan.   
   
   
   
   
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Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
Publications with keywords: planetary system - extrasolar planet - red dwarf
Publications with words: planetary system - extrasolar planet - red dwarf
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