HAT-P-36 b
HAT-P-36 b is a hot Jupiter orbiting HAT-P-36 in the constellation Canes Venatici. It lies about 960 light-years from Earth and was discovered in 2011 using the transit method.
How Big Is HAT-P-36 b?
HAT-P-36 b has a radius of 14.31 times that of Earth, or 1.28 times the radius of Jupiter. Its mass is 587 times that of Earth, giving it a density of 1.18 g/cm³ — closer to gas planets like Jupiter (1.33 g/cm³).
Is HAT-P-36 b in the Habitable Zone?
HAT-P-36 b orbits inside the inner edge of the habitable zone of HAT-P-36. So close to its star, surface conditions are far too hot for liquid water.
Habitable zone of HAT-P-36: 0.746–1.765 AU (conservative: 0.945–1.674 AU), per Kopparapu et al. (2014). Earth orbits the Sun at 1 AU.
See the full interactive habitable-zone view in the Exoplanet Explorer app ›
Temperature on HAT-P-36 b
The equilibrium temperature of HAT-P-36 b is about 1,781 K (1,508 °C) — hot enough to melt many metals. This estimate ignores any atmosphere, which could change surface temperatures dramatically — Earth's greenhouse effect adds about 33 °C.
Orbit and Year Length
A year on HAT-P-36 b — one full orbit around HAT-P-36 — lasts just 31.9 hours, shorter than Mercury's 88-day year. It orbits at an average distance of 0.024 AU — closer to its star than Mercury is to the Sun.
How Was HAT-P-36 b Discovered?
HAT-P-36 b was discovered in 2011 using the transit method, with observations from HATNet.
The transit method watches a star for the tiny, regular dip in brightness that occurs when a planet crosses in front of it. The depth and timing of these dips reveal the planet's size and orbital period.
How Far Away Is HAT-P-36 b?
HAT-P-36 b is 960.3 light-years (294.4 parsecs) from Earth. Light arriving here tonight left the planet around the year 1066. A probe traveling at the speed of Voyager 1 — about 17 km/s, the fastest outbound spacecraft ever launched — would need roughly 16,901,280 years to make the journey.
Earth Similarity Index
The Earth Similarity Index (ESI) scores how physically similar a planet is to Earth, from 0 to 1, based on radius, density, escape velocity and surface temperature. HAT-P-36 b scores 0.06, ranking #5,084 of 5,568 planets with a known ESI. For reference, Mars scores about 0.70.
The Host Star: HAT-P-36
HAT-P-36
- Surface temperature
- 5,620 K (Sun: 5,772 K)
- Mass
- 1.03 M☉
- Radius
- 1.04 R☉
Planetary System
HAT-P-36 b is the only planet known to orbit HAT-P-36 so far.
HAT-P-36 b — Complete Data
| Radius | 14.314 Earth radii (1.277 Jupiter radii) |
|---|---|
| Mass | 587.41 Earth masses (1.848 Jupiter masses) |
| Density | 1.18 g/cm³ (Earth: 5.51) |
| Orbital period | 1.33 days |
| Orbital distance | 0.024 AU |
| Equilibrium temperature | 1,781 K (1,508 °C) |
| Earth Similarity Index | 0.06 |
| Distance from Earth | 960.3 light-years (294.4 parsecs) |
| Constellation | Canes Venatici |
| Discovery method | Transit |
| Discovery facility | HATNet |
| Discovery year | 2011 |
Data: NASA Exoplanet Archive, last updated 2019-07-08. Earth Similarity Index: PHL @ UPR Arecibo.
Frequently Asked Questions About HAT-P-36 b
Is HAT-P-36 b habitable?
No — HAT-P-36 b orbits too close to its star and is too hot for liquid water to exist on its surface.
How far away is HAT-P-36 b?
HAT-P-36 b is about 960 light-years from Earth in the constellation Canes Venatici. A spacecraft traveling as fast as Voyager 1 (about 17 km/s) would need roughly 16,901,280 years to get there.
How big is HAT-P-36 b compared to Earth?
HAT-P-36 b has 14.31 times the radius of Earth and about 587 times its mass.
How long is a year on HAT-P-36 b?
One orbit around HAT-P-36 takes 1.3 Earth days — short enough that 275 of its years would fit into one Earth year.