News on Exoplanets
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- 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
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Giant solarsystem discovered
Friday, 10 December 2010 12:08
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| Astronomy - Exoplanets |
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Most exoplanets found so far, circles their parent-star in closer orbits than ours. But a newly discovered entire planetary system, is a larger version of our own planetary system.
Astronomers have discovered a fourth giant planet, joining three others that, in 2008, were the subject of the first-ever pictures of a planetary system orbiting another star other than our sun. The solar system orbits around a dusty young star named HR8799, which is 129 light years away. All 4 planets are roughly 5-7x the mass of Jupiter. Now, the same research team that discovered tje system, has discovered a fourth planet that is about 7x the mass of Jupiter. Using high-contrast, near infrared adaptive optics on the Keck II telescope in Hawaii, the astronomers imaged the fourth planet (dubbed HR8799e) in 2009 and confirmed its existence and orbit in 2010. "The images of this new inner planet in the system is the culmination of 10 years worth of innovation, making steady progress to optimize every observation and analysis step to allow the detection of planets located ever closer to their stars," said Christian Marois, a former LLNL postdoc now at NRC, and first author of the new paper. If this newly discovered planet was located in orbit around our sun, it would lie between Saturn and Uranus. At about 30 million years old, this giant version of our solar system is young compared to our system, which is about 4,6 billion years old. Though the system is very much like our own, it is much more extreme than our own - the combined mass of the four giant planets may be 20xs higher, and the asteroid and comet belts are dense and turbulent. In fact, the massive planets' pull on each other gravitationally, and the system may be on the verge of falling apart. Lawrence Livermore scientists simulated millions of years of evolution of the system, and showed that to have survived this long, the three inner planets may have to orbit like clockwork, with the new planet going around the star exactly four times while the second planet finishes two orbits in the time it takes the outer planet to complete one. This behavior was first seen in the moons of Jupiter but has never before been seen on this scale. Studying the planet's orbits also will help estimate their masses. "Our simulations show that if the objects were not planets, but supermassive "brown dwarfs," the system would have fallen apart already," said Quinn Konopacky, a postdoctoral researcher at LLNL's Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics and a key author of the paper. "The implication is that we have truly found a unique new system of planets. We don't yet know if the system will last for billions of years, or fall apart in a few million more. As astronomers carefully follow the HR8799 planets during the coming decades, the question of just how stable their orbits are could become much clearer." (See the simulation showing thousands of years of evolution of the system if the planets are not in a clockwork orbit or are more massive brown dwarfs.)
The origin of these four giant planets remains a puzzle. It neither follows the "core accretion" model, in which planets form gradually close to stars where the dust and gas are thick or the "disk fragmentation" model in which a turbulent planet-forming disk rapidly cools and collapses out at its edges. Bruce Macintosh, a senior scientist at LLNL and the principal investigator for the Keck Observatory program, said: "There's no simple model that can make all four planets at their current location. It's a challenge for our theoreticall colleagues." The research appears in the Dec. 8 edition of the journal Nature. |




