This illustration shows a rogue planet traveling through space. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt (Caltech-IPAC)

INTERESTING: New Rogue Planet Discovered

From the AAS Editor: Gravitational microlensing causes the apparent brightness of a background star to vary when a foreground object passes across our line of sight. The mass and distance of the lensing object are usually degenerate parameters. Dong et al. have identified a microlensing event caused by a planetary-mass object with no associated host star. By combining observations from Earth and a distant spacecraft, the mass-distance degeneracy can be broken, allowing for measurement of the lensing object’s mass, which is similar to Saturn’s. The researchers argue that this free-floating object did not form in isolation but was ejected from a host planetary system by dynamical interactions. —Keith T. Smith


Simultaneous ground- and space-based observations of a newly discovered free-floating planet have enabled direct measurement of its mass and distance from Earth, according to a new study. The findings offer insights into the diverse and dynamic pathways by which planets can be cast adrift into interstellar space. Although studies to date have only revealed a handful of such free-floating planets, detections are expected to increase in the coming years, particularly with the NASA Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope campaign that is scheduled for launch in 2027, notes Gavin Coleman in a related Perspective. “Simultaneous space- and ground-based observations of microlensing events could be applied in the planning of future exploratory missions and could lead to a better understanding of how planets form across the Galaxy.”

Planets are most often found bound to one or more stars, yet a growing body of evidence shows that some wander the galaxy alone. These objects, called free-floating or rogue planets, lack any known stellar companion. And, since they don’t emit very much light, they reveal themselves only through their subtle gravitational effects – a phenomenon called microlensing. One of the main limitations of this discovery method is that it cannot determine the distance to these planets, making independent measurement of their mass difficult. As a result, much about this elusive population of solitary worlds remains speculative.

Here, Subo Dong and colleagues report the discovery of a new free-floating planet detected via a fleeting microlensing event. However, unlike previous detections, Dong et al. uniquely observed this microlensing event simultaneously from both Earth and space, using several ground-based surveys alongside the Gaia space telescope. Tiny differences in the timing of the light reaching these distantly separated vantage points enabled measurement of the microlensing parallax, which, when combined with finite-source point-lens modeling, allowed the authors to determine the planet’s mass and location. It is ~22% the mass of Jupiter and roughly 3,000 parsecs from the center of the Milky Way. Because this planet’s mass is comparable to that of Saturn, Dong et al. argue that it likely formed within a planetary system, rather than in isolation like a small star or brown dwarf. Such low-mass rogue planets are thought to be born around stars and later expelled from their orbital confines through gravitational upheavals, such as interactions with neighboring planets or unstable stellar companions.

Journal: Science

DOI 10.1126/science.adv9266 

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mleskovarsocalrrcom
January 5, 2026 6:49 am

Very interesting. We don’t know what we don’t know but it doesn’t stop us from discovering. I would say add this to the list of the affects of CC. You never know what a rogue planet may/could/possibly will do.

I'm not a robot
Reply to  mleskovarsocalrrcom
January 5, 2026 6:57 am

Yeah, the extra energy trapped by carbon could eject the earth from its orbit, which would affect women and the poor the most.

Reply to  I'm not a robot
January 5, 2026 8:13 am

You forgot the children…

1saveenergy
Reply to  Phil R
January 5, 2026 10:07 am

No, I left them there on purpose, horrible screaming nasty things !! (:-))

Reply to  I'm not a robot
January 6, 2026 6:16 am

I think I heard something like that on NPR recently. 🙂

I'm not a robot
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
January 6, 2026 6:19 am

Bingo!

Reply to  I'm not a robot
January 6, 2026 6:32 am

Also on NPR, I heard yesterday- all the commentators whining over Trump’s capture of Maduro. That it was illegal, blah, blah, blah. Almost made me puke.

GeorgeInSanDiego
January 5, 2026 6:58 am

As if I didn’t have enough to worry about. Next you’ll tell me that there are rogue black holes. Thanks, I guess.

J Boles
Reply to  GeorgeInSanDiego
January 5, 2026 7:09 am

“Now there’s a look in your eyes, like black holes in the sky” (Pink Floyd song lyrics)

Robertvd
Reply to  GeorgeInSanDiego
January 5, 2026 7:12 am

 The whole universe cheese story is full of black holes.

Reply to  Robertvd
January 6, 2026 12:23 am

Black holes, dark matter, dark energy… I made a joke with the wife, told her soon we’ll have dark light.
By all ye gads, wasn’t two weeks, or some twerp justified his grant with Dark Photons, you know, the things that make dark lines on your standard two split experiment?
This is religion, a dark religion, with a dark lord. I wonder what they call him.
CLIMASTROLOGER OF THE DARK HEAVENS, SAVETH THEE OUR DARK SOULS, PROTECT US FROM THE LIGHT OF LOGICAL AND SELF CONSISTENT THEORISING, LEAD US NOT INTO THE TEMPTATION OF ACTUAL THINKING. Hymen.

Reply to  Robertvd
January 6, 2026 6:18 am

Which reminds me of a story- decades ago some Chinese were visiting Switzerland and went to a cheese factory. They wanted to know why their cheese had holes in it. It’s probably one of great mysteries of existence. 🙂

antigtiff
Reply to  GeorgeInSanDiego
January 5, 2026 7:50 am

Yes, I have seen estimates of rogue black holes as well as rogue planets and the ever abundant random rocks. Space is so vast is what saves us…vast and empty yet full of dust radiation rocks planets and black holes…….ready to spoil your day at any time. The planet Mercury has atoms of sodium and potassium and other elements being “burned’ off by the sun so random elements must be flying thru space. What a place.

Reply to  antigtiff
January 5, 2026 10:47 am

Did you read yesterday’s story about increased C14 detected in ancient tree rings as a result of the Carrington event? That’s a pretty wild thought, that the carbon in the atmosphere is ejected from the Sun.

MarkW
Reply to  Lil-Mike
January 5, 2026 6:29 pm

The carbon being discussed in that article did not come from the sun.
That C14 resulted from radiation from the sun impacting atoms in the atmosphere and turning them into C14.

Reply to  MarkW
January 6, 2026 12:33 am

… But somehow never C13, because only fossil fuels can make C13, that’s how we know we are doomed, C13… Very industrial, C13.
Or we can investigate Velikovski’s idea that Venus is covered in C13 molecules, such as petroleum.
Then we can start working at stupid shift like rogue planets, with no sun, planets that radiate light, will you!!
The most irritating thing about these astrologer types is that they cannot even get their theories to stop contradicting themselves.
I have more respect for the mathematics of the astrologers, at least the poor fools remain consistently steadfast to their dogma.
I blame Hollywood, of course, if they never smeared butter all over Einstein, no-one would have taken his nonsense serious.

drh
January 5, 2026 7:00 am
Reply to  drh
January 5, 2026 9:43 am

Getting chillier.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
January 6, 2026 6:23 am

Been a serious winter here in Wokeachusetts, so far- more so than in many recent years. I’m hoping it gets so severe that all the solar panels are buried under deep snow- and strong storms mess up the wind machines. 🙂

Also hoping for deep snow so I can get out my snowshoes, which I haven’t needed for many years. It’s a lot of fun.

Reply to  drh
January 5, 2026 9:54 am

And with this statement:

“. . . global average lower tropospheric temperature (LT) anomaly for December, 2025 was +0.30 deg. C departure from the 1991-2020 mean, . . .”

That means the December 2025 anomaly is actually 0.1°C lower than the previous January 2020 peak value (+0.4°C) in the running 13-month centered average anomaly trending. This is within the typical range of UAH reported month-to-month variability.

Can we now admit that that effects of the January 2022 Hunga-Tonga volcano eruption are now over, assuming that that eruption actually caused ANY significant perturbations to Earth’s atmospheric temperatures beginning January 2022?

So much for the HT eruption and injection of “massive amounts of water” into the stratosphere causing a global warming trend that many asserted would last five years or longer.

January 5, 2026 8:43 am

Uh-oh!

Any other WUWT readers familiar with Fred Saberhagen’s “Berserker hypothesis” and associated fleet of planetary-size sterilizing spacecraft set out across the universe
(ref: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berserker_hypothesis )?

 Dong et al. better get on this quickly to see if the gravitational microlensing caused by their so-called “rogue planet” indicates it is following a spacetime geodesic path, or instead is consistent with propulsive thrusting activity (i,e., non-gravitational continuous acceleration) and, IN PARTICULAR, determine if it’s velocity vector is aligned so as to intercept our Solar System’s trajectory in the Milky Way.

“Imagination was given to man to compensate him for what he is not; a sense of humor to console him for what he is.” — Francis Bacon

Reply to  ToldYouSo
January 5, 2026 9:56 am

We had an interstellar asteriod come through the Solar System in recent days, and a professor at MIT speculated that this object might be guided by an alien species and it was headed for Earth. He seemed to think that the aliens could use this asteriod, weighing no-telling how many tons, like a space ship.

This professor got a lot of mileage out of this speculation. He even got interviewed on Fox News Channel. People actually took this guy seriously. He took himself seriously.

With this rogue planet being 3,000 parsecs away, I doubt the professor will claim the rogue planet will visit Earth carrying aliens.

Of course, if the aliens are capable of propelling spacecraft weighing millions of tons, then I suppose they could cross 3,000 parsecs without much trouble.

Somebody ask the professor.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
January 5, 2026 4:27 pm

I recall a Star Wars episode where the hero claimed the Millienium Falcon had made a run to a certain destination in space in 7.5 parsecs.

The author didn’t understand that a parsec is a measure of distance, not speed.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
January 6, 2026 12:41 am

Yeah, well, that was light years ago, no one remembers….

Reply to  cilo
January 6, 2026 10:48 am

. . . and in a galaxy far,far away, so no one cares.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
January 6, 2026 1:52 am

That annoyed me as a teen.
But now I view it as the equivalent of Le Mans 24 hour. That’s a race that runs for a known time and measures distance.
Of course, with FTL physics, time and space are related in complex ways. But it can be argued away.
With the power of the Schwartz.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
January 6, 2026 10:47 am

Yeah, that was in the first released full Stars Wars movie “Episode IV – A New Hope” and, somewhat incredibly, it was repeated in the “Episode VII – The Force Awakens”

BTW, I truly believe the character Hans Solo claim of “making the Kessel Run in less than 12 parsecs” was made in reference to time, not speed, as to indicate to Obi-Wan Kenobi how fast the Millennium Falcon could travel.

Nevertheless, some have invented theories as how, theoretically, the shortening of spacetime distance could actually have been done by a “powerful enough” spaceship traveling at FTL (yeah, right) . . . see https://www.reddit.com/r/MovieDetails/comments/ah3ptm/solo_a_star_wars_story_cleverly_explains_how_the/
if interested in after-the-fact excuses.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
January 6, 2026 12:38 am

ISomebody ask the professor

No, no no!!
We should ask the best NASA has ever delivered: That sxy blonde guy that is “investigating aliens” on Skinwalker Ranch, what a frigging genius!!
Can somebody close please walk up to that twit and slap him until he picks up a voltmeter?
If he knows what that is…

Reply to  ToldYouSo
January 5, 2026 11:56 am

Back in the 1950s, E.E ‘Doc’ Smith wrote the Lensman novels. They are now largely forgotten despite being voted the 2nd greatest science fiction series of all time in a 1966 Hugo Award ceremony (Asimov’s Foundation series won).

Possibly the books are ignored because Warner Bros are promoting the DC Green Lantern superheroes which are heavily inspired by them. See also the Book of Magic and Harry Potter.

Anyway, in the books both sides in the galactic war use planets as missiles. They fit the planets with spaceship engines and crash them into the enemy’s fleet or home planets.

An idea that would be used, if we had spaceship engines capable of FTL movement. So, if that technology can exist and somewhere there are other intelligent beings who have that technology… You would expect there to be lots of rogue planets.

Rogue planets would be the equivalent of unfired bullets, littering the battlefield.

Reply to  MCourtney
January 5, 2026 12:31 pm

Good comments.

As regards,

“You would expect there to be lots of rogue planets.”

Maybe, maybe not, if:
1) Berserkers (mistaken for rogue planets) were all using FTL drives most of the time to transverse the great distances between stars, and/or
2) The Berserkers actually received some “pushback” (that is, quick annihilation) from civilizations more advanced than them at the time of an encounter . . . with full respect to Saberhagen’s foresight of Berserker AI and its continuous learning capability. Nothing rules out a sufficiently advanced and beneficent civilization setting out its own anti-Berserker hunter-killer units to sweep such a plague from the universe.

P.S. Fell in love with the “Doc” Smith Lensmen books shortly after I graduated high school. Would also HIGHLY recommend Larry Niven’s books centered around his “Known Space” construct. IMHO, Lensmen and every single one of DC comics/WB superheros and every single Marvel superhero can’t hold a candle to Niven’s “Protecter” character.

January 5, 2026 8:50 am

I’ll bet the planet went rogue when the inhabitants burnt too many fossil fuels. 😏

Reply to  Paul Hurley
January 6, 2026 9:34 am

Or they stored all their nuclear waste on one side of the planet and an accident in space set it all off. (Probably in 1999.)

Bob Armstrong
January 5, 2026 8:57 am

So , it’s a chunk of dark matter .

GeorgeInSanDiego
Reply to  Bob Armstrong
January 5, 2026 12:10 pm

If Rajendra Gupta is correct; there is no dark matter, or dark energy. Gupta’s assertion is the the principle of “tired light” hasn’t been properly accounted for when calculating the age of the universe based on the wavelength of the cosmic background radiation. Gupta’s universe is 26.7 billion years old, rather than the widely accepted 13.8 billion, and his universe doesn’t need dark matter or dark energy.

January 5, 2026 9:33 am

New Rogue Planet Discovered

Rover, wanderer, nomad, vagabond – call it what you will.

Reply to  PariahDog
January 6, 2026 12:47 am

Rover, wanderer, nomad, vagabond – call it what you will.

Okay, I’ll call it a plasmoid bubble of density different than its environment, causing standard diffraction just like hot air on a road.
Plasmid radiation would also get rid of the discrepancy between dead planet and “giving of little light”.

Mr David Guy-Johnson
January 5, 2026 11:56 pm

Very interesting thanks

observa
January 6, 2026 5:45 am

Typical of the galactic domination and spacism of planet dwellers not to recognise the liberation from oppression of a gravity free moon. We moonies won’t rest until every moon is free at last.

January 6, 2026 6:15 am

Nice to see an occasional astronomy story as I think that science is the most rapidly advancing science- or one of them anyway- and it’s utterly fascinating.