A planet called TrES-2b absorbs 99.9% of all light that hits it making it the darkest object ever discovered in the known universe


Coal absorbs about 95% of visible light. Black acrylic paint absorbs roughly the same. TrES-2b absorbs 99.9%—making it the darkest known object in the universe.
Located about 750 light-years away in the constellation Draco, this Jupiter-sized gas giant reflects less than 1% of the starlight that hits it. If you could somehow see it up close, it would appear as a near-perfect void—a ball of nothingness hanging in space. "It's darker than the blackest lump of coal, than dark acrylic paint you might paint with," said astronomer David Kipping. "It's bizarre how this huge planet became so absorbent of all the light that hits it."
But TrES-2b isn't entirely invisible. Because it orbits so close to its star—just 3 million miles away, compared to Mercury's 28 million miles from our Sun—its surface temperature exceeds 1,800°F (980°C). At that temperature, the planet emits a faint, eerie red glow, like a dying ember in the darkness.
Scientists believe the extreme heat prevents the formation of reflective ammonia clouds that make Jupiter so bright. The planet's atmosphere likely contains light-absorbing chemicals like vaporized sodium, potassium, and gaseous titanium oxide. But even accounting for all of these, no existing model fully explains why TrES-2b is so impossibly dark. According to Princeton researchers, "something that seems to be present and absorb light hasn't been accounted for in basic models." There's a missing ingredient in the recipe—and we still don't know what it is.
Coal absorbs about 95% of visible light. Black acrylic paint absorbs roughly the same. TrES-2b absorbs 99.9%—making it the darkest known object in the universe.
Located about 750 light-years away in the constellation Draco, this Jupiter-sized gas giant reflects less than 1% of the starlight that hits it. If you could somehow see it up close, it would appear as a near-perfect void—a ball of nothingness hanging in space. "It's darker than the blackest lump of coal, than dark acrylic paint you might paint with," said astronomer David Kipping. "It's bizarre how this huge planet became so absorbent of all the light that hits it."
But TrES-2b isn't entirely invisible. Because it orbits so close to its star—just 3 million miles away, compared to Mercury's 28 million miles from our Sun—its surface temperature exceeds 1,800°F (980°C). At that temperature, the planet emits a faint, eerie red glow, like a dying ember in the darkness.
Scientists believe the extreme heat prevents the formation of reflective ammonia clouds that make Jupiter so bright. The planet's atmosphere likely contains light-absorbing chemicals like vaporized sodium, potassium, and gaseous titanium oxide. But even accounting for all of these, no existing model fully explains why TrES-2b is so impossibly dark. According to Princeton researchers, "something that seems to be present and absorb light hasn't been accounted for in basic models." There's a missing ingredient in the recipe—and we still don't know what it is.
Coal absorbs about 95% of visible light. Black acrylic paint absorbs roughly the same. TrES-2b absorbs 99.9%—making it the darkest known object in the universe.
Located about 750 light-years away in the constellation Draco, this Jupiter-sized gas giant reflects less than 1% of the starlight that hits it. If you could somehow see it up close, it would appear as a near-perfect void—a ball of nothingness hanging in space. "It's darker than the blackest lump of coal, than dark acrylic paint you might paint with," said astronomer David Kipping. "It's bizarre how this huge planet became so absorbent of all the light that hits it."
But TrES-2b isn't entirely invisible. Because it orbits so close to its star—just 3 million miles away, compared to Mercury's 28 million miles from our Sun—its surface temperature exceeds 1,800°F (980°C). At that temperature, the planet emits a faint, eerie red glow, like a dying ember in the darkness.
Scientists believe the extreme heat prevents the formation of reflective ammonia clouds that make Jupiter so bright. The planet's atmosphere likely contains light-absorbing chemicals like vaporized sodium, potassium, and gaseous titanium oxide. But even accounting for all of these, no existing model fully explains why TrES-2b is so impossibly dark. According to Princeton researchers, "something that seems to be present and absorb light hasn't been accounted for in basic models." There's a missing ingredient in the recipe—and we still don't know what it is.

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Crazy Fun Facts
1 crazy cool fun fact every morning. Always be coolest, funniest, smartest person in the room ;)
"Did you know that bananas are berries? I do now, and I can't unlearn it. Thanks a lot."
“I subscribed for the facts, but honestly I just love getting emails"
"This newsletter cured my fear of learning things"
"My dog learned to read just to enjoy these facts with me"
"I learned that octopuses have three hearts. I still only have one, but knowledge is power"
"Finally, a newsletter that respects my 47-second attention span"
"Fun fact: I now know more about mantis shrimp than my actual job"
"I brought up the immortal jellyfish at Thanksgiving. The family is concerned."
"Told my boss these facts came from Harvard research. Got a raise. Feeling dangerous."
"I forward these to my ex just so they know what they're missing (facts, not me)"
"My FBI agent definitely enjoys these too"
"Did you know that bananas are berries? I do now, and I can't unlearn it. Thanks a lot."




Crazy Fun Facts
1 crazy cool fun fact every morning. Always be coolest, funniest, smartest person in the room ;)
"Did you know that bananas are berries? I do now, and I can't unlearn it. Thanks a lot."
“I subscribed for the facts, but honestly I just love getting emails"
"This newsletter cured my fear of learning things"
"My dog learned to read just to enjoy these facts with me"
"I learned that octopuses have three hearts. I still only have one, but knowledge is power"
"Finally, a newsletter that respects my 47-second attention span"
"Fun fact: I now know more about mantis shrimp than my actual job"
"I brought up the immortal jellyfish at Thanksgiving. The family is concerned."
"Told my boss these facts came from Harvard research. Got a raise. Feeling dangerous."
"I forward these to my ex just so they know what they're missing (facts, not me)"
"My FBI agent definitely enjoys these too"
"Did you know that bananas are berries? I do now, and I can't unlearn it. Thanks a lot."
"Did you know that bananas are berries? I do now, and I can't unlearn it. Thanks a lot."
“I subscribed for the facts, but honestly I just love getting emails"
"This newsletter cured my fear of learning things"
"My dog learned to read just to enjoy these facts with me"
"I learned that octopuses have three hearts. I still only have one, but knowledge is power"
"Finally, a newsletter that respects my 47-second attention span"
"Fun fact: I now know more about mantis shrimp than my actual job"
"I brought up the immortal jellyfish at Thanksgiving. The family is concerned."
"Told my boss these facts came from Harvard research. Got a raise. Feeling dangerous."
"I forward these to my ex just so they know what they're missing (facts, not me)"
"My FBI agent definitely enjoys these too"
"Did you know that bananas are berries? I do now, and I can't unlearn it. Thanks a lot."