Sorry Trekkies: Bad news about the 'real-life Planet Vulcan'

The search continues?
 By 
Elisha Sauers
 on 
Astronaut giving Vulcan salute in space
Star Trek fans might be disappointed by a new study that refutes the existence of an exoplanet where Spock's Planet Vulcan was said to be in the sci-fi show. Credit: NASA via Getty images

Scientists Katherine Laliotis and Jennifer Burt didn't set out to anger Trekkies with their new study of exoplanets in other solar systems.

It just so happens the data pointed them and the rest of their research team to a logical — most logical — conclusion, they said.

Five years ago, a paper published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society reported the existence of a planet orbiting a star about 16 light-years away. The star was 40 Eridani. That might not be a familiar name to everyone, but fans of the original Star Trek series know it as the host star of Spock's fictional planet, Vulcan.


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The trouble is, after a reanalysis, the new team found the discovery was likely a mistake. That's right: They couldn't just let Spock live long and prosper in a real world. They had to go and wipe out his home planet from existence.

"We apologize for that," Burt told Mashable. "We'll find other cool planets."

Their research, accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal, is intended to support NASA's future Habitable Worlds Observatory, a mission that would use a space telescope to image Earth-like planets around relatively close stars. The project, decades in the making, aims to study these balmy worlds for signs of life. It's slated to launch sometime in the 2040s.

Star Trek's Spock visiting Vulcan planet
In the sci-fi series 'Star Trek,' Spock came from Vulcan, a planet said to orbit 40 Eridani, a real star in the Milky Way. Credit: CBS via Getty Images

The group pored over a huge public data release to look at exoplanets in the southern hemisphere. Their goal was to vet some of the best bets for the future telescope. In the process, though, they found a few previously documented exoplanets were likely errors.

One of those was 40 Eri b, the official name the original authors gave to Planet Vulcan. The new paper formally refutes it.

Planet Vulcan 'discovered' in 2018

In 2018, the original authors described the exoplanet as the closest super-Earth orbiting another sun-like star. It was said to be twice the size of Earth with a 42-day year within the star's habitable zone. A super-Earth is a type of planet that is up to 10 times more massive than our blue marble but is lighter than ice giants like Neptune and Uranus.

Any rocky planet within this other Milky Way system would have a triple sunset because 40 Eridani actually includes three stars that circle each other.

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"We'll find other cool planets."
A super-Earth orbiting 40 Eridani
Researchers published the discovery of a planet where Vulcan was set in Star Trek. Credit: University of Florida

Laliotis, Burt, and the rest of the new team used radial velocity to check solar systems for viable candidates. It's a method of exoplanet detection that looks for subtle changes in the frequency of starlight as seen from Earth. The gravitational tug of an orbiting planet is thought to cause little wobbles in the light measurements.

Their analysis found features indicative of stellar activity, not evidence of an exoplanet.

"They will look like planetary signals, but it's actually not a planet," said Laliotis, who was a NASA intern during the research and is now working on her doctorate at The Ohio State University. "It's something like little spots on the surface of the star."

It's not known whether the original researchers who published the exoplanet discovery agree with the new analysis. Mashable's attempts to reach the first two authors, affiliated with the University of Florida, weren't successful.

Search for Earth-like exoplanet continues

Since word has spread of the new results, the scientists involved have gotten somewhat razzed by fans, including family members. Laliotis said her father proceeded to give her a lesson in Vulcanian "history," explaining that the planet was headed for destruction, but that wasn't supposed to happen for a couple more centuries.

Burt, an astrophysicist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said her mother refused to read the article.

"My mom was a Trekkie," she said. "She maintained this is why I'm an astronomer. She said, 'I watched a lot of 'Star Trek' when I was pregnant with you, and so, clearly, that came through.'"

The starship Enterprise flying through space
The starship Enterprise allowed Star Trek characters to seek out life on exoplanets. Credit: CBS via Getty Images

Despite their findings, the search for Spock's home can continue, Laliotis said. Though they may not have a starship Enterprise to seek it out, more sensitive instruments and detection methods in the near future may make it possible to find another smaller exoplanet in that star system — perhaps one that is more Earth-like — to rename Vulcan.

After all, if 40 Eri b's detection were correct, it would be much too hot for life as we know it.

"There is still hope that there might be a Vulcan there," she said. "This actually is maybe promising that there might be a better Vulcan there."

Topics NASA

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Elisha Sauers

Elisha Sauers writes about space for Mashable, taking deep dives into NASA's moon and Mars missions, chatting up astronauts and history-making discoverers, and jetting above the clouds. Through 17 years of reporting, she's covered a variety of topics, including health, business, and government, with a penchant for public records requests. She previously worked for The Virginian-Pilot in Norfolk, Virginia, and The Capital in Annapolis, Maryland. Her work has earned numerous state awards, including the Virginia Press Association's top honor, Best in Show, and national recognition for narrative storytelling. For each year she has covered space, Sauers has won National Headliner Awards, including first place for her Sex in Space series. Send space tips and story ideas to [email protected] or text 443-684-2489. Follow her on X at @elishasauers.

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