Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Space
  3. News

This planet is hotter than a star and has four seasons every 36 hours

Add as a preferred source on Google
NASA’s TESS Delivers New Insights Into an Ultrahot World

NASA’s planet-hunting satellite TESS (Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite) has been used to discover more about one of the most extreme planets ever detected, KELT-9 b, which is not only hotter on the surface than some stars but also has two summers and two winters every 36 hours.

Recommended Videos

KELT-9 b is famous for being the hottest exoplanet yet discovered, with a surface temperature of 7,800 degrees Fahrenheit (4,300 degrees Celsius). It’s so hot that the hydrogen molecules in its atmosphere are torn apart in planetwide meltdowns.

“The weirdness factor is high with KELT-9 b,” John Ahlers, an astronomer at Universities Space Research Association and NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center said in a statement. “It’s a giant planet in a very close, nearly polar orbit around a rapidly rotating star, and these features complicate our ability to understand the star and its effects on the planet.”

This illustration shows how planet KELT-9 b sees its host star
This illustration shows how planet KELT-9 b sees its host star. Over the course of a single orbit, the planet twice experiences cycles of heating and cooling caused by the star’s unusual pattern of surface temperatures. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center/Chris Smith (USRA)

One reason that the planet has such extreme features is that it is tidally locked, meaning one side of the planet always faces the sun. It is this side that becomes extremely hot, while the far side is relatively cooler, leading to strange interactions in the planet’s atmosphere as parts of it warm and cool.

Another reason the planet is strange is that its host star is unusual as well, spinning 38 times faster than the sun to complete a rotation in just 16 hours. The speed of this rotation affects the star’s shape, making it flatter at the poles and thicker around the circumference. In turn, this shape changes the temperature distribution of the star, with the poles being hotter and the equator being cooler.

When the planet passes over the star’s poles it experiences a kind of “summer” and when it passes over the cooler equator it experiences a kind of “winter.” “So KELT-9 b experiences two summers and two winters every year, with each season about nine hours,” NASA explains.

As well as being a fascinating example of an extreme planet and star system, KELT-9 can also help scientists learn about detecting other exoplanets.

“Of the planetary systems that we’ve studied via gravity darkening, the effects on KELT-9 b are by far the most spectacular,” Jason Barnes, a professor of physics at the University of Idaho and a co-author of the paper, said in the statement. “This work goes a long way toward unifying gravity darkening with other techniques that measure planetary alignment, which in the end we hope will tease out secrets about the formation and evolutionary history of planets around high-mass stars.”

The findings are published in the Astronomical Journal.

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
China’s answer to SpaceX’s reusable rockets literally catches boosters in a net
SpaceX catches boosters on legs. China just used a net.
Ammunition, Missile, Weapon

SpaceX's playbook for recovering a rocket booster generally involves legs, a precisely controlled vertical landing, and either a concrete pad or a drone ship. 

China just managed to pull off something similar, but in a slightly different way, and on July 10, it tested the method as well.

Read more
Dimming the sun sounds unhinged, but this new study on El Niño makes a surprisingly good case for it
A natural test case, Australia's worst-ever wildfire season, suggests the idea deserves serious consideration.
Nature, Outdoors, Sky

When I first saw "scientists propose dimming the sun," I rolled my eyes. It sounds like a science fiction movie cooked up after watching many climate documentaries. But a new study, published on July 8, 2026, in the journal Science Advances, seems to have a genuinely compelling argument.

A Super El Niño is currently forming in the Pacific, feared to be the most intense in decades. It could escalate floods, wildfires, and extreme heat events worldwide. However, Researchers at UC San Diego's Scripps Institution of Oceanography, led by climate scientists Kate Ricke and Jessica Wan, are now proposing one of the most interesting solutions I’ve come across.

Read more
You can now walk through space and gaze into a black hole at this VR exhibit
Smithsonian Starstruck lets you drift past dying stars and see the origin point of the universe for as little as $18 a person.
Smithsonian Starstruck featured

Most planetarium shows ask you to sit still and look up. The Smithsonian's new VR exhibit takes a different approach, letting visitors walk through the vast expanse of the universe, drifting past stars, planets, and a black hole to get a physical sense of its true scale.

A $29 ticket to the edge of the galaxy

Read more