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Hawai‘i Astronomers Discover Newborn Giant Planet

Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope
Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope
Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope
Credit Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope

A team of Hawai‘i based astronomers have discovered a newborn planet larger than Jupiter that has an orbit very different from our own.  The planet is in the Taurus stellar nursery, more than 400 light years away and it’s orbiting a 2-million year old sun that’s considered the stellar equivalent of a week old human baby.

The discovery is helping scientists understand how large planets known as “Hot Jupiters” settle into orbits around their sun which are much closer than the sun in our own solar system.  They add that it can also contain clues to understanding how planetary systems form and evolve.  Clare Moutou is an astronomer with the Canada-France-Hawai‘i Telescope on the Summit of Mauna Kea. 

 More information can be found on theCanada-France-Hawai‘i-Telescope's Website.

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Nick Yee’s passion for music developed at an early age, as he collected jazz and rock records pulled from dusty locations while growing up in both Southern California and Honolulu. In college he started DJing around Honolulu, playing Jazz and Bossa Nova sets at various lounges and clubs under the name dj mr.nick. He started to incorporate Downtempo, House and Breaks into his sets as his popularity grew, eventually getting DJ residences at different Chinatown locations. To this day, he is a fixture in the Honolulu underground club scene, where his live sets are famous for being able to link musical and cultural boundaries, starting mellow and building the audience into a frenzy while steering free of mainstream clichés.
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