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Six new extra-solar planets discovered using new technique
By Tim Joy
5 January 2000
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While space missions such as the Mars Pathfinder mission or
the International Space Station capture most public attention,
exciting new developments in our understanding of the cosmos are
being made from earth-based telescopes. On November 29, the leading
team of planet finders announced the discovery of six new extra-solar
planets or planets outside our solar system. The findings increase
the number of such planets by 25 percent and bring the total number
to 28.
For a field of science that only moved from speculation into
reality five years ago, the discovery of planets orbiting distant
stars is akin to Galileo's discovery of the moons of Jupiter in
the 17th century with one of the first telescopes. Galileo's observations
provided the first glimpses of new worlds and helped popularise
the theories of Copernicus. The detection of planets outside our
solar system poses fresh theoretical questions concerning planetary
systems and makes more tangible the prospects of life forms beyond
the earth.
For the past three years, Steven Vogt, professor of astronomy
and astrophysics at the University of California, with colleagues
Geoffrey Marcy, Paul Butler and Kevin Apps have conducted a search
for nearby stars. Using the High Resolution Echelle Spectrograph
(HIRES), designed and built by Vogt, on the Keck I Telescope in
Hawaii, the team surveyed 500 stars similar in size, age and brightness
to the Sun.
The six new planets range in mass from 0.8 to 6.5 times the
mass of Jupiter and are probably similar in composition to Jupiter,
a giant ball of hydrogen and helium gas about 317 times the mass
of the earth. The distance of the new planetary systems from earth
is between 65 and 192 light years.
Five of the six planets orbit in what is know as the habitable
zone of their starsthat is, within a region where
temperatures allow water to exist in liquid form. For instance,
the planet orbiting the star HD 134987 in the constellation Libra
had an average orbital distance of 0.81 astronomical units (AUthe
distance from the earth to the Sun) and an estimated equilibrium
surface temperature of 42 degrees Centigradewell within
the habitable zone of its star. But at 1.58 times the mass of
Jupiter, it would have little in common with Earth.
It is unlikely that a system with Jupiter-sized planets at
low orbits would include Earth-like planetsthe smaller planet
would be ejected by the gravitational pull of the larger one.
But it is possible that the large planet could have orbiting moons
that may have conditions to support life. Vogt commented: For
a planet in the habitable zone of its star, such moons offer the
possibility of liquid water and the eventual emergence of life.
Like most of the other extra-solar planets discovered so far,
the orbits of the new planets tend to be oval rather than circular.
One of the stars, HD 222582, has a planet with the most eccentric
orbitcoming as close as 0.39 AU to the parent star and receding
to 2.31 AU to its furthest point during its 576-day orbit. It
is beginning to look like neatly stacked circular orbits, such
as we see in our own solar system, are relatively rare,
Vogt said.
Astronomers are able to detect the presence of a planet by
examining a slight wobble in the motion of the star caused by
the gravitational pull of the planet. Vogt's team used a new method
to measure this wobble by what is known as the Doppler effect.
As the distant star moves relative to the earth, the light from
the star shifts in frequencytowards blue as it approaches
and towards red as it departs. If the star were isolated then
this shift would be constant. The existence of a planet orbiting
the star would cause slight variations, or wobbles,
in the frequency shift.
The light from the star passes through a bottle of iodine vapour
placed at the focus of the telescope to remove specific frequencies
from the spectrum; these missing frequencies are then used as
a reference to calculate any shift. By observing the star over
time and using a computer to analyse the light spectrum, it is
possible to discern shifts in wavelength to an accuracy of 1 part
in 100 million. The orbit of a planet will cause these wobbles
to be periodic. By examining the magnitude of each shift, the
path of the orbit and the minimum mass of the planet can then
be calculated using the laws of motion.
Some astronomers have challenged this method claiming that
the stars themselves are oscillating. Others have pointed out
that the strongest and most easily detected oscillations should
occur at high frequencies. But Vogt and his colleagues recently
demonstrated the validity of their technique by predicting and
measuring the dimming of a star as a planet passed in front of
it.
The size, composition and orbit of the new planets will add
to the scientific debate about the formation of planets. The findings
further challenge the conventional theory that planets form from
an outer edge of a spinning disk of gas and dust orbiting around
a star. One of the planets, also discovered by a team at the University
of Geneva, had a mass over three quarters the size of Jupiter
but orbiting very close to its star (0.15 AU) over a short time
(24.36 days). At present there is no clear understanding as to
how such large planets could form so close to a star.
The researchers also gathered data on four previously discovered
planets. Two of the planets showed signs in their orbits indicating
the existence of a companion object. At present it is not clear
whether the companion objects are further planets or other larger
objects such as brown dwarfsa type of star. The discovery
comes only seven months after the first multi-planet system outside
our own, around the star Upsilon Andromedae, was identified. Vogt
commented: It will take years of additional observations
to work out the masses and orbits of these companions, but the
evidence suggests that there are a large number of multi-planet
systems out there.
The latest discoveries add significantly to what is a rapidly
expanding field of astronomy. The National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA) is expected to launch a network of space-based
telescopes in the year 2005 to start a five-year mission looking
for new planetsa development that would greatly enhance
prospects of new discoveries.
See Also:
First extra-solar
planetary system discovered
[22 April 1999]
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