While exoplanets are seemingly a dime a dozen, their looks have been mysteries; they often exist only as measurements. Scientists using the Hubble Space Telescope
have partly solved that riddle by pinpointing the visible color of an
extrasolar world for the first time. By measuring reflected light, they
can tell that HD 189733b (conceptualized above) is a cobalt blue, much
like Earth's oceans. Not that we can claim much kinship, though. The
planet is a gas giant 63 light-years away -- its blue tint comes from an
atmosphere likely full of deadly silicate. As disappointing as that may
be, the discovery should at least help us understand planet types that
don't exist in the Solar System.
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