How to make a super-Earth: The universe’s most common planets are whittled down by stellar radiation

by | Jan 20, 2026 | Science

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.An artist’s impression of the four bloated planets orbiting V1298 Tau as they lose their atmospheres to space. . | Credit: Astrobiology Center, NINS.The secret behind the formation of super-Earth and sub-Neptune exoplanets has been revealed, thanks to a study of four young planets that are evaporating.Some 350 light-years away, the V1298 Tau system features an infant sun-like star, just 23 million years old, orbited by four planets on compact orbits close to their star, and all of which are seen to transit. Discovered in 2019 by astronomers Erik Petigura of the University of California, Los Angeles and Trevor David of the Flatiron Institute in New York, using data from the Kepler space telescope’s K2 mission, the four planets are huge, with radii between five and 10 times that of Earth.AdvertisementAdvertisementNow, a team of astronomers led by John Livingston from the Astrobiology Center in Tokyo and including Petigura and David, have used “transit timing variations” to measure the mass of each of the four planets. This has allowed the researchers to determine that the planets are very low density and that the atmosphere of each world is photoevaporating into space. This, says Livingston’s team, is the key to the formation of super-Earths and sub-Neptunes.Super-Earths are rocky planets larger and more massive than our own planet. Sub-Neptunes are partially gaseous worlds smaller than Neptune. Together, the two types of planet are the most common classes of world discovered by exoplanet hunters so far. (Planets smaller than Earth may indeed be more common, but they are harder to detect, so we haven’t found as many.) What’s curious is that our solar system contains neither a super-Earth nor a sub-Neptune, and astronomers don’t know why our solar system lacks one of these common planets, or how such worlds form.This is why the observations of V1298 Tau are such a big step forward. When a planet transits, or passes in front of, its host star, it blocks some of the star’s light. The amount of light it blocks tells us the planet’s radius. The frequency with which we see that planet transit then tells us its orbital period. The four planets have orbital periods of 8.2, 12.4, 24.1 and 48.7 Earth days, respectively. This is a very compact system — all four planets could easily fit inside the orbit of our solar system’s innermost planet, Mercury.Because the planets are all fairly close, their gravity tugs on each other, sometimes pulling a planet along its orbit a little faster, and sometimes causing it to go a little slower, depending on the respective planets’ relative locations. This results in the planets sometimes being a little late or a little early for their scheduled transit. These transit timing variations, or TTVs, can tell researchers the mass of the planets: The greater the variation in the timing of a transit, the more massive the mass of the planet pulling on the transiting world.AdvertisementAdvertisementWith the radii and the masses of the planets known, Livingston’s team could then calculate the densities of the planets, and found them to be extremely light.”The unusually large radii of the young planets led to the hypothesis that they have very low densities, but this had never been measured,” said Trevor David in a statement. “By weighing these pla …

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