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Posted Thursday, November 13, 2008 2:00 PM

Seen, Not Inferred: Exoplanets Galore

Sharon Begley
An illustration of Fomalhaut b, orbiting its sun, Fomalhaut
Credit: ESA, NASA, and L. Calcada (ESO for STScI)

While all of us who are rooting for the existence of little green men have been cheered by each discovery of a planet orbiting a star other than our sun—an “exoplanet,” of which there were 322 when I checked the catalog a minute ago—there’s always been a tinge of disappointment. Every validated discovery, starting with the first in 1995, has been indirect. In other words, astronomers didn't actually see the planet beyond our solar system, but instead inferred its existence by, for instance, noticing something funny about how a star moves and realizing, gee, that funny movement must be due to a planet tugging gravitationally on the star. But this afternoon, two separate teams of astronomers, using three different telescopes, are announcing the discovery of exoplanets by, well, looking.

One team, led by Paul Kalas of the University of California, Berkeley, used the Hubble Space Telescope to image a planet they call Fomalhaut b, orbiting the star Fomalhaut, 25 light years away in the constellation Piscis Australis (the Southern Fish). The other team, anchored by Christian Marois of the Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics in Victoria, British Columbia, imaged three planets orbiting a star called HR 8799, 128 light years from Earth, using the Keck and Gemini telescopes. Both are being published this afternoon online by the journal Science, at its Science Express website.

Typically, astronomers infer the existence of a planet around a star by studying how the star moves toward and recedes from Earth. If the motion is unusual, it implies the existence of a nearby object pulling on its gravitationally. That has let astronomers calculate the mass and orbit of the inferred planet. Only six exoplanets have been detected by actual imagery, and there are doubts about several—specifically, whether they are true planets or brown dwarfs, which are basically failed stars and not planets at all. Also, all of the six orbit at such large distances from their star that astronomers doubt they formed the same way the planets of our solar system did, which makes them less interesting for anyone hoping to find Earth-like, life-supporting worlds beyond the Sun.

This discovery breaks that mold. The Gemini telescope first spied two planets around HR 8799 on October 17, 2007. Eight days later, and again this past summer, Marois and colleagues used the Keck II telescope in Hawaii  to see a third planet orbiting even closer to the star. “Until now, when astronomers discover new planets around a star, all we see are wiggly lines on a graph of the star’s velocity or brightness,” said Bruce Macintosh of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories. “Now we have an actual picture showing the planets themselves, and that makes things very interesting. . . . After all these years, it’s amazing to have a picture showing not one but three planets. The discovery of the HR 8799 system is a crucial step on the road to the ultimate detection of another Earth.”

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The planets are about 10, 10 and 7 times the mass of Jupiter, orbiting HR 8799 (which is 50 percent larger and 5 times brighter than our Sun) at about 24, 37 and 67 times the distance between Earth and Sun, respectively. “I think there’s a very high probability that there are more planets in the system that we can’t detect yet,” Macintosh said. “One of the things that distinguishes this system from most of the extrasolar planets . . . is that HR8799 has its giant planets in the outer parts, like our solar system does, and so has room for smaller terrestrial planets, far beyond our current ability to see, in the inner parts.”

The discovery by the Hubble is of a planet estimated to be no more than three times Jupiter’s mass, and about 10 times the distance between Saturn and the Sun. Its discoverers plan to observe the planet in infrared light, which might reveal the existence of water vapor clouds in the atmosphere. If they find water, it would be more evidence that the requirements for life—a nice star, a decent-sized planet the right distance away, and water—are not that rare in the Milky Way galaxy.

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Member Comments

Posted By: jackh78 (April 1, 2009 at 6:53 PM)

while the idea of exoplanets is indeed a valid and necessary means of science, i detest the new science being formed here, science without proof or as i like to say, show me pictures not star wobble.

Asteroids and large enough comets can also cause a star wobble, especially now that asteroids can get as big as pluto. Its sad to see a new pseudoscience of scientist espousing ideas that cannot be proven, from stephen hawking talking about black holes billions of miles away that cannot be seen to a silly nova program with a female physicist saying "you might even run into a black hole  and not know it", no wonder why have nova and history and science channel ghost hunter shows and ufo shows.

star wobble proof is a redundant and silly idea, if you can proove thier are planets around stars by thier wobble why do you need telescopes at all and if you have to use a telescope to prove it, why use the idea at all as telescope developement is so slow due to the large size being needed to see far away objects that it makes star wobble theorums unecessary.

let telescopes and astronomers do real astronomy with telescopes, its like having sport fishing with the idea of comming up with catching a huge fish and a bunch of eggheads develope some form of sonar for catching fish, yet all they can tell is they have something large in the water, not what it is.

notice 99% of the planet is fell asleep listing about star wobble research planets found lol.

as shakespear might have said lets not make something that is not much ado about nothing much ado about nothing.

end of rant lol.


Posted By: expeditor (November 14, 2008 at 9:18 AM)

Spending for space is vital for civilization when looking long term. This planet will not exist as  a habitable place in the distant future. If we do not destroy ourselves first, the human race must find other worlds to  populate. The only other choice is someday to become extinct like 99% of the species that once lived on Earth. We have a major task ahead. If we find a habitable planet just 3-1/2 light years away, at the current rate of space travel,  it would take us 110,000 years to get there. Perhaps someday if funding for science continues, we will find a way to harness gravity or magnetism to move through space at near light speed.  


Posted By: jkat (November 14, 2008 at 1:20 AM)

I think this is absolutely amazing! The more we learn about other planets, solar systems, galaxies, the better we can understand ours.