Imagine a world unlike any you've ever seen. A scorching gas giant where temperatures reach over 4,350 degrees Fahrenheit (2,400 degrees Celsius). Here, iron rains down from the skies, not as a solid metal, but as superheated vapor. This is the bizarre and fascinating world of WASP-76b. A Fiery Giant Close to its Star WASP-76b is a distant exoplanet, located roughly 640 light-years away in the constellation Pisces. Discovered in 2013, this monster of a planet falls under the classification of a "hot Jupiter." These gas giants share similarities with our own Jupiter, but with a dramatic twist: they orbit their stars incredibly close. In WASP-76b's case, it circles its host star in less than two Earth days, this planet revolves around its parent yellow star at a distance of 30 million miles. If we compare it with Jupiter, Jupiter is 484 million miles away from the sun. Even this planet revolves closer than Mercury, the nearest planet to our sun. The distance between M...
“The universe is not only stranger than we imagine, it is stranger than we can't imagine”