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Other Planetary Systems. Detecting Extrasolar Planets Extrasolar planets are planets orbiting other...

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Other Planetary Systems
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Page 1: Other Planetary Systems. Detecting Extrasolar Planets  Extrasolar planets are planets orbiting other stars.  We usually detect these planets by the.

Other Planetary Systems

Other Planetary Systems

Page 2: Other Planetary Systems. Detecting Extrasolar Planets  Extrasolar planets are planets orbiting other stars.  We usually detect these planets by the.

Detecting Extrasolar PlanetsDetecting Extrasolar Planets

Extrasolar planets are planets orbiting other stars. We usually detect these planets by the effect they have on a star. This can be

difficult, because stars are far away! Indirect: Measure star’s position, brightness or spectra. We can also directly detect planets by the light reflected - this requires a new

generation of telescopes. A Sun-like star is about a billion times brighter than the light reflected from its

planets. Planets are close to their stars, relative to the distance from us to the star.

This is like being in San Francisco and trying to see a pinhead 15 meters from a grapefruit in Washington, D.C.

Extrasolar planets are planets orbiting other stars. We usually detect these planets by the effect they have on a star. This can be

difficult, because stars are far away! Indirect: Measure star’s position, brightness or spectra. We can also directly detect planets by the light reflected - this requires a new

generation of telescopes. A Sun-like star is about a billion times brighter than the light reflected from its

planets. Planets are close to their stars, relative to the distance from us to the star.

This is like being in San Francisco and trying to see a pinhead 15 meters from a grapefruit in Washington, D.C.

Page 3: Other Planetary Systems. Detecting Extrasolar Planets  Extrasolar planets are planets orbiting other stars.  We usually detect these planets by the.

Extrasolar Planetary Systems

In the past decade, telescopes and probes launched into space have returned data and images which have led to the discovery of more than a hundred extrasolar planets.

This image is the latest showing a planet much larger than Jupiter circling a star about 200 LY distant.

Page 4: Other Planetary Systems. Detecting Extrasolar Planets  Extrasolar planets are planets orbiting other stars.  We usually detect these planets by the.

How can a star's motion reveal the presence of planets?How can a star's motion reveal the presence of planets?

Page 5: Other Planetary Systems. Detecting Extrasolar Planets  Extrasolar planets are planets orbiting other stars.  We usually detect these planets by the.

Gravitational TugsGravitational Tugs The Sun's motion around

the solar system's center of mass depends on tugs from all the planets.

Astronomers around other stars that measured this motion could determine the masses and orbits of all the planets.

The Sun's motion around the solar system's center of mass depends on tugs from all the planets.

Astronomers around other stars that measured this motion could determine the masses and orbits of all the planets.

Page 6: Other Planetary Systems. Detecting Extrasolar Planets  Extrasolar planets are planets orbiting other stars.  We usually detect these planets by the.

Doppler MeasurementsDoppler Measurements

Measuring the Doppler shift of light from an object, such as a star, will tell us how fast it is moving towards or away from Earth. To within 1 meter/second!

A periodic Doppler shift will tell us there is a large planet and how fast it orbits the star.

The planets detected so far have been much larger than Earth (and much larger than Jupiter). They have been gas giants orbiting very close to their star.

Measuring the Doppler shift of light from an object, such as a star, will tell us how fast it is moving towards or away from Earth. To within 1 meter/second!

A periodic Doppler shift will tell us there is a large planet and how fast it orbits the star.

The planets detected so far have been much larger than Earth (and much larger than Jupiter). They have been gas giants orbiting very close to their star.

Page 7: Other Planetary Systems. Detecting Extrasolar Planets  Extrasolar planets are planets orbiting other stars.  We usually detect these planets by the.

First Extrasolar PlanetFirst Extrasolar Planet

Doppler shifts of the star 51 Pegasi indirectly revealed a planet with 4-day orbital period.

This short period means that the planet has a small orbital distance.

This was the first extrasolar planet to be discovered around a Sun-like star (1995).

Doppler shifts of the star 51 Pegasi indirectly revealed a planet with 4-day orbital period.

This short period means that the planet has a small orbital distance.

This was the first extrasolar planet to be discovered around a Sun-like star (1995).

Page 8: Other Planetary Systems. Detecting Extrasolar Planets  Extrasolar planets are planets orbiting other stars.  We usually detect these planets by the.

Transits and EclipsesTransits and Eclipses

A transit is when a planet crosses in front of a star. The resulting eclipse reduces the star's apparent brightness

and tells us planet's radius. No orbital tilt: accurate measurement of planet mass

A transit is when a planet crosses in front of a star. The resulting eclipse reduces the star's apparent brightness

and tells us planet's radius. No orbital tilt: accurate measurement of planet mass

Page 9: Other Planetary Systems. Detecting Extrasolar Planets  Extrasolar planets are planets orbiting other stars.  We usually detect these planets by the.

The Formation of Other Solar SystemsThe Formation of Other Solar Systems

Recent findings have shown other solar systems are forming as we speak. Space telescopes have shown images of dusty disks around nearby stars.

Astronomers theorize that the process that formed our solar system is common in the galaxy and billions of other solar systems may exist.

Theory predicts gas giants form outside the Frost Line for a solar system, and terrestrial planet closer to the star. Huge gast giants orbiting close to stars are thought to have migrated there after they formed.

Recent findings have shown other solar systems are forming as we speak. Space telescopes have shown images of dusty disks around nearby stars.

Astronomers theorize that the process that formed our solar system is common in the galaxy and billions of other solar systems may exist.

Theory predicts gas giants form outside the Frost Line for a solar system, and terrestrial planet closer to the star. Huge gast giants orbiting close to stars are thought to have migrated there after they formed.

Page 10: Other Planetary Systems. Detecting Extrasolar Planets  Extrasolar planets are planets orbiting other stars.  We usually detect these planets by the.

Searching For New WorldsSearching For New Worlds

Future telescopes will have dramatically increased range and capabilities, potentially detecting earth sized planets in the next decade.

The Kepler mission has discovered 3200 candidates (confirming 132) (6/2013).

•http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/kepler/main/index.html

•http://astrobiology.com/2013/06/new-kepler-mission-data-delivered.html

Page 11: Other Planetary Systems. Detecting Extrasolar Planets  Extrasolar planets are planets orbiting other stars.  We usually detect these planets by the.

Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS)

Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS)

TESS is the successor to Kepler

Once launched, the telescope would conduct a two-year all-sky survey, looking for transiting exoplanets around nearby, bright stars.

TESS will have 4 wide-angle telescopes and cameras (192 megapixels)

TESS is planned for launch in 2017

TESS is the successor to Kepler

Once launched, the telescope would conduct a two-year all-sky survey, looking for transiting exoplanets around nearby, bright stars.

TESS will have 4 wide-angle telescopes and cameras (192 megapixels)

TESS is planned for launch in 2017


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