A distant Earth-sized planet is orbiting so near its dad or mum star that gravity is stretching it to an excessive diploma, turning it egg-shaped.
A handful of identified exoplanets are extraordinarily near their dad or mum stars, which exposes them to extremely harsh circumstances. These “ultra-short interval” planets – they take lower than a day to finish one loop round their stars – are blasted with radiation and sometimes have surfaces composed fully of lava.
Now, Fei Dai on the College of Hawaiʻi and his colleagues have found…