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Health & Science2h 19m ago
New data from the Very Large Telescope suggests CoRoT-2 b rotates much slower than other hot Jupiters, resolving a decade-long puzzle about its westward winds.
Pasadena, California
Who
Emily Rauscher, Aurora Kesseli, NASA Exoplanet Science Institute (NExScI), Lisa Dang
What
New data from the Very Large Telescope suggests CoRoT-2 b rotates much slower than other hot Jupiters, resolving a decade-long puzzle about its westward winds.
When
Wed, 17 Jun 2026 16:50:00 GMT · 2h 19m ago
Where
Pasadena, California ·
Why
The planet CoRoT-2 b showed westward planetary winds, contrary to theoretical predictions and observations of other hot Jupiters which have eastward winds.
The Frontline Impact
How this affects you
The discovery that CoRoT-2 b rotates slower than it orbits its star challenges existing one-size-fits-all models for hot Jupiters, indicating more complex atmospheric dynamics and tidal locking assumptions are needed for exoplanet research.
Story chain
4 events in this thread- Currently Reading2h 19m agoNew data from the Very Large Telescope suggests CoRoT-2 b rotates much slower than other hot Jupiters, resolving a decade-long puzzle about its westward winds.
- Health & Science2h 19m agoNew data from the Very Large Telescope suggests the hot Jupiter CoRoT-2 b rotates much slower than other hot Jupiters, explaining its westward winds.Open article
- Health & Science2h 19m agoNew data from the Very Large Telescope supports the hypothesis that CoRoT-2 b is rotating much slower than other hot Jupiters, explaining its westward winds.Open article
- Health & Science2h 19m agoNew data from the Very Large Telescope supports the hypothesis that CoRoT-2 b, a hot Jupiter exoplanet, rotates much slower than other hot Jupiters, explaining its westward winds.Open article
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