'Unique and extreme': James Webb telescope detects possible alien world bubbling over with volcanoes

Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope have detected possible signs of gases released by volcanic activity on a distant exoplanet.

An illustration of exoplanet l 98-59 d
Artist’s impression of L 98-59 d, a sulfurous world around a red dwarf star.
(Image credit: NASA)

Today, we know of more than 5,000 exoplanets: planets outside our solar system that orbit other stars. While the effort to discover new worlds goes on, we're steadily learning more about the exoplanets we've already detected: their sizes, what they're made of and whether they have atmospheres.

Our team has now provided tentative evidence for a sulfur-rich atmosphere on a world that's 1.5 times the size of Earth and located 35 light years away. If confirmed, it would be the smallest known exoplanet with an atmosphere. The potential presence of the gases sulfur dioxide (SO₂) and hydrogen sulphide (H₂S) in this atmosphere hint at a molten or volcanic surface.

Agnibha Banerjee
PhD Student, The Open University

Agnibha Banerjee is a PhD Student at The Open University, UK, studying exoplanet atmospheres with the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST).