Facts about the strangest, most unusual and downright cool exoplanets astronomers have discovered over the past few decades.

By Jess Wilder

Published: Friday, 05 January 2024 at 07:57 AM


Since the discovery of the first exoplanets in the 1990s, all manner of the weirdest and most wonderful worlds have been found orbiting stars beyond our Solar System.

Who wouldn’t want to leave Earth for the promise of an interplanetary trip to a strange exoplanet?

With thousands confirmed and the number of exoplanets discovered growing daily, you may get lucky: about half of the Sun-like stars out there are thought to have the potential to host life

That’s about 300 million potentially habitable worlds in our galaxy (for more on this, find out what makes a planet habitable).

Don’t pack your bags just yet though – as these weirdest exoplanets show, you may be in for the holiday from hell.

And, with a wealth of new exoplanet-hunting missions in the pipeline, there could be plenty more strange worlds discovered over the coming years.

10 of the weirdest exoplanets ever discovered

HD 189773b – where it rains glass sideways

Credit: ESO/M. Kornmesser

This nightmare world is only 64 lightyears away and the closest ‘hot Jupiter’ to Earth. It may look like a gorgeous deep-blue marble floating serenely in space, but if you had the misfortune to visit this massive gas giant, you’d soon regret it.

As well as being spun furiously by winds blowing at 8,700 km/h, you’d be cut to shreds by glass rain. The planet’s delightful blue colour is the reflection of silicate in its atmosphere – silicate that, when heated by the planet’s deathly 1300°C temperature, forms grains of glass.

TOI 849 b – a world stripped bare

Exoplanet TOI 849b. Credit: University of Warwick/Mark Garlick
Credit: University of Warwick/Mark Garlick

Discovered in 2020 by NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), it’s no fun at all on TOI 849 b. This exoplanet orbits so tightly to its star that a year passes in 18 hours. Don’t bother with constant birthday parties though, as there’s no atmosphere and the 1530°C heat would melt the cake.

What makes TOI 849 b on of the weirdest exoplanets discovered is its strangely hybrid nature. While it’s around the size of gas giant Neptune, it’s dense and rocky not gaseous – in fact, it’s the largest rocky world yet discovered, 40 times as massive as Earth. It may even be the first Chthonian planet to be detected: the exposed remnant core of a gas giant that has had its atmosphere blasted away.

WASP-12b – puffed up planet in a death spiral

An artist's illustration of exoplanet WASP-12b. Credit: NASA/ESA/G. Bacon
Credit: NASA/ESA/G. Bacon

Just three million or so years from its eventual fiery demise, WASP-12b is spiralling inexorably inwards towards doom at the hands of its yellow dwarf host star.

Studies shown the planet, located 600 lightyears away in the Auriga constellation, is now so close that it’s begun wobbling and distorting under the spell of the star’s gravity, while intense stellar radiation has caused it to swell up so much that it’s falling apart.

Read more about exoplanet WASP-12b

Rogue worlds: exoplanets on the loose

An artist's illustration showing a rogue planet traveling through space. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt (Caltech-IPAC)
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt (Caltech-IPAC)

Many exoplanets may be scary and inhospitable, and they may come in different sizes, colours and densities, but at least they all reliably do one thing: orbit a star. Or do they? While most planets are locked in orbit around their sun, some worlds are actually roaming the galaxy untethered. With no parent star to light and warm them, life is dark and cold on these nomads adrift in the vastness of space.

Catching sight of these hard-to-detect ‘rogue planets’ will be one of the tasks for NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, coming online around 2025. One such planet is OT44, located 550 lightyears away in the constellation Chamaeleon. This cosmic wanderer is eleven times more massive than Jupiter and thought to have a circumstellar disc of dust, rock and ice.

The recently identified OGLE-2016-BLG-1928 is another. Likely smaller than Earth, it’s one of the lowest-mass objects ever found using microlensing techniques.

55 Cancri e – a diamond planet

An artist's concept showing how exoplanet 55 Cancri e compares with Earth. A planet made of diamonds has to be one of the weirdest exoplanets discovered. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt (SSC)
An artist’s concept showing how exoplanet 55 Cancri e compares with Earth. A planet made of diamonds has to be one of the weirdest exoplanets discovered. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt (SSC)

A planet made of diamonds has to be one of the weirdest exoplanets discovered. This exoplanet in orbit around Sun-like host star 55 Cancri A may be a real gem. The first super-Earth discovered around a main sequence star, it was thought to be so abundant in carbon that, thanks to immense pressure and 2,700°C temperatures, its interior was made of diamond.

More recent research has taken the shine off the diamond theory, revealing less carbon than previously thought, but the nature of 55 Cancri e remains enigmatic and hotly contested.

Read more about exoplanet 55 Cancri e

TrES-2b – the darkest exoplanet

Exoplanet TrES-2b. Credit: David A. Aguilar (CfA)
Credit: David A. Aguilar (CfA)

“It’s so…black! You can hardly make out its shape…light just seems to fall into it!” Hitchhiker’s’ Ford Prefect may have been describing Hotblack Desiato’s limoship, but he could just as easily have been talking about TrES-2b. Identified by NASA’s Kepler Space Telescope in 2011, it’s the darkest known exoplanet, reflecting less than 1% of any light that hits it.

TrES-2b orbits a star some 750 lightyears away in the direction of the constellation Draco and is the darkest planet or moon ever discovered. “It’s darker than the blackest lump of coal, than dark acrylic paint you might paint with. It’s just ridiculous how dark this planet is,” said study lead-author David Kipping from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.

KELT-9b – the hottest exoplanet

An artist's rendering of hot Jupiter exoplanet KELT-9b, the hottest known exoplanet. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

This list is all about the weirdest exoplanets, but what about the hottest? Ultra-hot Jupiter-type exoplanet KELT-9b is so scorching that it’s even hotter than many stars. It orbits so close to its star that its surface sizzles at 4,300°C – so hot it has atomic iron and titanium in its atmosphere – and a year lasts less than a day and a half.

Using data from the Spitzer Space Telescope, researchers have found that the extreme temperatures on the planet’s dayside cause molecules of hydrogen gas to tear apart, only to recombine when they flow to the relatively cooler eternal nightside, before being torn apart once more when they move back into the furnace.

Read more about exoplanet KELT-9b

HR 5183b – the planet with the strangest orbit