It has been about three decades since the first confirmed exoplanet was discovered. In the following 30 years, using a variety of telescopes and instruments on the ground and in space, astronomers have cataloged more than 5,000 planets around other stars.
As part of this process of scientific discovery, astronomers have confirmed that our Milky Way galaxy teems with billions of planets. They exist around many (if not most) stars, and they come in all sizes and flavors. There are very large and very small planets and very hot and very cold ones. There are more than a few that could harbor life as we know it on Earth.
After this initial wave of discovery, powered by such NASA survey missions as the Kepler Space Telescope and the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, second-generation instruments like Europe’s small Cheops satellite have sought to characterize the nature of these exoplanets. Launched less than three years ago on a Soyuz rocket, the Cheops instrument has delivered some valuable insights on planets orbiting other stars.
A very bright planet
On Monday, in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics, European scientists describe one of these worlds that has an extremely high albedo, planet LTT9779 b. An albedo is simply the amount of light reflected by a planet back into space. Earth reflects about 30 percent of the Sun’s light into space, whereas Venus, with its thick clouds, reflects 75 percent of its light.
The planet LTT9779 b, which is located around a Sun-sized star about 260 light-years from Earth, has a higher albedo than that of Venus, about 80 percent. One big question for scientists is how the planet could reflect so much light, as it’s hot enough that it should not have any clouds. This is because it is located extremely close to its star, orbiting once every 19 hours.
This is a pretty hellish planet with a radius slightly larger than that of Neptune (and 4.7 times that of Earth) and a surface temperature on the order of about 2,000° Celsius. Based upon their observations of other exoplanets, astronomers were surprised to find a Neptune-sized world so close to its star. Before, only large worlds (similarly sized to Jupiter) or much smaller worlds have been found so close to stars. Accordingly, the environment near stars has been characterized as a “hot Neptune desert.”

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