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Published 17:25 28 Feb 2022 GMT
Updated 17:27 28 Feb 2022 GMT
Via NASA/CalTech[/caption]
"I don't think we can say what they'd look like for sure, because cloud formation is complicated and we don't have clouds like these to observe up close in our own solar system," Mikal-Evans told Mashable. However, the astronomer suggests that the clouds could resemble dust storms seen on Earth.
Researchers suspect that "some of the clouds would have red and blue colouration" which is caused by specific minerals. Aluminium condenses to become the mineral corundum, which in turn makes rubies and sapphires. By this logic, such clouds could contain flecks of precious gems.
"Liquid gems could therefore be raining on the nightside hemisphere of WASP-121b," the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy said via press release.

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