Sulfur-Scented Exoplanet Redefines Planet Types

TL;DR Summary
Scientists using JWST have identified L 98-59 d, a 1.6× Earth-radius exoplanet 35 light-years away with a global magma ocean that stores sulfur, producing a sulfur-rich atmosphere including hydrogen sulfide; its low density and molten interior challenge existing small-planet categories. Computer models trace its five-billion-year evolution from a volatile-rich world that cooled and shrank while preserving sulfur, implying more exotic planet types exist—though the planet is unlikely to host life.
- Newly Discovered Planet Could Be the Smelliest in the Universe, Astronomers Say The Daily Galaxy
- Volatile-rich evolution of molten super-Earth L 98-59 d Nature
- Astronomers discover what may be a new type of planet Yahoo
- Hellish new planet identified beyond solar system Financial Times
- ‘A molten, mushy state’: scientists may have found a new type of liquid planet | Astronomy The Guardian
Reading Insights
Total Reads
0
Unique Readers
2
Time Saved
5 min
vs 6 min read
Condensed
94%
1,099 → 70 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on The Daily Galaxy