What it’s like to stand here
OGLE-2005-BLG-071L b
- weight
- 7.10 g
Illustration computed from this world’s measured and derived values, not a photograph.
Gas giant
OGLE-2005-BLG-071L b
Microlensing: spotted when its gravity briefly magnified the light of a more distant star.
OGLE-2005-BLG-071L →
host star
13.00 R⊕
radius · estimated
1,200 M⊕
mass · microlensing (model-dependent)
–
orbital period
-218°C (-361°F)
avg temp
What it's like to stand here
7.10 g
surface gravity (no solid surface · measured mass)
–
one year, in Earth time
–
sun size, needs orbit
–
sky color, needs star temp
0.1×
how high you could jump vs Earth
normal
day/night cycle (not tidally locked)
How long to get there · 10,437 ly away
Jet airliner
12.5 billion years
dies en route1000-yr cryo: fails
Parker Solar Probethe fastest craft ever built
16.3 million years
dies en route1000-yr cryo: fails
Light speed
10,437 years
dies en route1000-yr cryo: fails
Warp 10
10 years
arrives, just older
Folding spacetime
instant
arrives thriving
Size vs Earth
Explore from here · roam the neighborhood
OGLE-2005-BLG-071L bGas giant
PlanetMOA-bin-1L bsimilar world
SystemMOA-2009-BLG-266L530 ly
Sky regionScorpiusthis direction
Host star
OGLE-2005-BLG-071L
host star · 1 planet
Sibling worlds in this system
No other confirmed planets here yet. New ones auto-appear as telescopes report.
Nearby star systems
Zoom out: star → system → (soon) galaxy arm, host black hole, and a real image of the host galaxy.
Illustration generated from OGLE-2005-BLG-071L b's confirmed parameters, not a photograph.