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Study of 'twin' stars finds 1 in 12 have killed and eaten a planet

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About one in every 12 stars may have swallowed a planet, a new study finds.

Previous research had discovered that some distant stars possess unusual levels of elements, such as iron, which one would expect to make up rocky worlds such as Earth. This and other evidence suggested that stars may sometimes ingest planets, but much remained uncertain about how often that might happen.

One way to uncover more about planetary ingestion is to look at two stars born at the same time. Such twins should have a virtually identical composition, as they are both born from the same parent cloud of gas and dust. Any major chemical differences between these so-called "co-natal" stars may thus be a sign that one devoured a world.

In the new study, the researchers used the European Space Agency's Gaia satellite to identify 91 pairs of stars. Within each traveling pair, the stars sit relatively close to one another — less than a million astronomical units apart — and are likely co-natal. An astronomical unit, or AU, is the average distance between the sun and Earth, or about 93 million miles (150 million kilometers).

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When molecules are heated, they give off unique spectrums of light wavelengths corresponding to the elements they're made of. Scientists analyzing light coming from distant stars can therefore deduce the stars' elemental compositions as stellar molecules are exposed to very high temperatures.

The scientists used the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope in Chile, the Magellan Telescope, also found in Chile, and the Keck Telescope in Hawaii to analyze the light from these co-natal stars. They found about 8 percent of these pairs — about one in 12 — had one star that displayed signs it had engulfed a planet. In other words, its chemical makeup differed when compared with its twin.

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