Thousands of exoplanets may orbit supermassive black holes | | Exoplanets - worlds orbiting other stars - are apparently common, with billions estimated to exist in our galaxy alone. They've been found around all sorts of stars, including sunlike stars, red dwarfs and even pulsars. There may also be rogue planets, which don't orbit any stars, but instead wander lonely though interstellar space. And now a new study suggests that there might be yet another entirely new class of planets orbiting supermassive black holes. Read more. | | |
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