In July 2014 the International Astronomical Union (IAU) launched NameExoWorlds, a process for giving proper names to certain exoplanets and their host stars.
[5][6] The winning name was submitted by the Planetarium Südtirol Alto Adige in Karneid, Italy.
Phobetor is, in Ovid's Metamorphoses, one of the thousand sons of Somnus (Sleep) who appears in dreams in the form of beasts.
In comparison, the Sun is about 4.6 billion years old[9] and has a surface temperature of 5,778 K.[10] The star's apparent magnitude, or how bright it appears from Earth's perspective, is 12.2.
Also, multiple issues arise with this theory that debates nearly impossible steps on how the planets ended up in their current places.
The neutron star would then orbit the secondary companion (forming an X-ray binary) until the now-red supergiant exceeded its Roche lobe and began spilling material onto the neutron star, with the transfer being so dramatic that it forms a Thorne–Żytkow object.
[11] The most widely accepted model for the planets around Lich is that they were a result of two white dwarfs merging.
After the explosion, the disk around the pulsar would still be massive enough (about 0.1 M☉) to form planets, which would likely be terrestrial, due to them being composed of white dwarf material such as carbon and oxygen.