NASA's exoplanet-hunting spacecraft TESS (Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite) has a new method for detecting worlds beyond the solar system. The technique relies on a phenomenon introduced by Einstein in his 1915 theory of gravity, general relativity, called gravitational microlensing.
The exoplanet in question is called Gaia23bra b. The first hints of this exoplanet were found in 2023 by the now-retired Gaia space telescope via the slight brightening of a star caused by a microlensing event.
TESS usually spots planets by the tiny drop in the light output from their parent star as they cross, or transit, its face. This technique is most effective for very large gas giants that orbit close to their star, so it most likely wouldn't work for Gaia23bra b, which has 1.6 times Jupiter's mass but orbits its star at a similar distance to Jupiter's orbit around the sun. Additionally, the transit method employed by TESS usually has a search radius of around 150 light-years. Gaia23bra b, however, ...


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