Like a family in which short parents have tall children, a tiny red dwarf star is defying our understanding of how planets form by existing alongside a giant exoplanet.
Giant planets are not rare per se — after all, we have four in our own
Like a family in which short parents have tall children, a tiny red dwarf star is defying our understanding of how planets form by existing alongside a giant exoplanet.
Giant planets are not rare per se — after all, we have four in our own