News on Exoplanets
- Freefloationg exoplanet may outnumber stars
- First direct ligth from Earthlike exoplanet
- Look for Jupiter-like planets, when you search for Earth-like planets
- Stars occasionally capture wandering planets
- Discovery of two planetary babies
- New study suggests the Solarsystem is the norm
- A star with 9 exoplanets
- Discovery of 2 very old exoplanets
- Millions of Earthlike planets in th eMilkyway
- Premature planetary-formation
- Runaway planets
- Kepler releases new catalog-2321 planet candidates
- Water in the atmosphere of a super-Earth
- New 3D model for planetary accretion
- Red dwarf stars may be more habitable than imagined
- Our galaxy may swarm with free--floating planets
- Hubble reveals a new class of exoplanet
- Discovery of potential habitable exoplanet
- 11 new solarsystems hosting 26 planets discovered
- First SETI observations of Kepler candidates
- Discovery of smallest known exoplanets
- New class of planetary system
- Searching for habitable exo-moons
- Discovery of 2 Earth-size planets raises questions about stellar evolution
- Kepler discovers first truly Earth-sized planets
|
An Exoplanet with a Potassium-Rich Atmosphere
Sunday, 06 March 2011 19:30
|
|
| Astronomy - Exoplanets |
|
Astronomers observing a well known hot Jupiter planet with ESO's 10m telescope at the Canary islands, have found that its atmosphere contains plenty of potassium, and has made a detailed model of its atmosphere. A hot Jupiter - a type of celestial object unknown only fifteen years ago - is a Jupiter-sized exoplanet orbiting so close to its host star that its atmospheric temperature is thought to be hundreds of degrees Celsius. When a hot Jupiter is seen in a transiting system, its passage across the face of the star provides an opportunity to study its atmosphere, as light from the star passes through the thin layer on route to Earth. The atmospheres of two hot Jupiters have been studied so far, with sodium (but only sodium) detected. The constituents and their properties are interesting in and of themselves, and also shed light on global parameters of the planet such as atmospheric circulation, thermal inversion layers, and the possible presence of clouds.
CfA astronomer Jean-Michel Desert has teamed up with ten colleagues to use the 10,4m telescope in the Canary Islands to study the atmospheres of transiting hot Jupiters. The astronomers have just announced their results on the object known as XO-2b, a hot Jupiter whose radius is the same as Jupiter's, whose mass is about half, and which orbits its star in only 2,6 days. They discovered that the atmosphere contains potassium, one of the elements that had been predicted to exist in current models but which had not been seen in the other two cases. The new results help to substantiate and improve the current theory of exoplanetary atmospheres, and illustrate the dramatic advances underway in detecting and modeling the atmospheres around strange distant worlds that were unknown not long ago. Source: Harvard |




