Astronomers Witness Birth of New Solar System

Astronomers have observed the earliest stages of rocky planet formation around a young star for the first time. This discovery provides insight into how Earth-like worlds may come into existence.

Jul 20, 2025 - 12:44
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Astronomers Witness Birth of New Solar System

In a cosmic first, astronomers have spotted the earliest signs of rocky planet formation around a young star. The discovery offers a rare vision of how Earth-like worlds may begin.

Astronomers have spotted the earliest known signs of rocky planet formation around a young, sun-like star for the first time. The discovery offers an unprecedented glimpse into what may have happened at the dawn of our own solar system.

Using NASA's James Webb Space Telescope and the European Southern Observatory's ALMA array in Chile, researchers peered into the gas disk surrounding the infant star HOPS-315, about 1,370 light-years away. The star is just 100,000 to 200,000 years old — a newborn in cosmic terms — and is thought to be on its way to becoming a yellow dwarf like our sun.

Lead researcher Melissa McClure of Leiden Observatory said, \"We've captured a direct glimpse of the hot region where rocky planets like Earth are born around young protostars. For the first time, we can conclusively say that the first steps of planet formation are happening right now.\"

The observations, published in the science journal Nature, show a glowing, lightning bug-like system against the dark void — a cosmic nursery where planets may one day emerge. While it's impossible to say how many planets HOPS-315 might produce, its massive gas disk could support as many as eight — just like our solar system — though that process may take a million years or more.

Thanks to a tilt in the star's disk and a helpful gap in its outer region, the telescopes were able to detect signs of silicate minerals and silicon monoxide gas condensing. These are the very building blocks believed to have formed Earth and other rocky planets in our solar system over 4.5 billion years ago.

Fred Ciesla of the University of Chicago called it a long-awaited breakthrough, saying, \"There's a rich opportunity here.\" Astronomers hope similar discoveries will reveal how common planet formation is — and whether Earth-like worlds are a universal phenomenon or a rare cosmic fluke.

Co-author Merel van't Hoff of Purdue University raised the question, \"Are there Earth-like planets out there, or are we so special that we might not expect it to occur very often?\"

According to the source: DW.

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