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
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Kepler discoveres planet orbiting 2 stars
Tuesday, 04 October 2011 14:44
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| Astronomy - Exoplanets |
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The Kepler satellite, which has now reported the detection of 1781 candidate exoplanets, has also discovered that at least one of them orbits a double star. Each of the two stars in this new system is smaller than the sun (0,2 and 0,69 solar-masses), and the planet, called Kepler 16, actually orbits around both of them (rather than orbiting only one). A team of 8 CfA astronomers, Samuel Quinn, Dave Latham, Guillermo Torres, Matt Holman, Robert Sefanik, Warren Brown, John Geary, and Dimitar Sasselov joined with colleagues to report the discovery of Kepler 16 in the latest issue of Science. Kepler detects exoplanets when they transit across the face of a star, dimming its light slightly and briefly; luckily, in this system the planet transits the face of each of the two stars as seen from Earth. The planet itself has a mass about that of Saturn's, orbits around the pair in 221 days, and has a surface temperature of around -87°C. Source: Harvard |




