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Search for Extra-Solar Planets

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Title: Search for Extra-Solar Planets


1
Search for Extra-Solar Planets
2
Background
  • 1995 first discovered evidence that other stars
    have planets. 
  • As of April 2014, 1780 planets, including 460
    multiple planetary systems
  • Evidence suggests that a majority of sun-like
    stars possess them. 
  • Most of these stellar systems bear little
    resemblance to ours.

3
Difficulties with the Search
  • Planets are very small and very dark compared to
    stars
  • Even stars appear as nothing more than pinpoints
    of light when viewed with even the largest
    telescopes
  • Planets have only a fraction of the mass of a
    star, nuclear fusion reaction that makes stars
    burn does not take place.
  • Planets are found right next to the stars they
    orbit

4
Methods
  • Most planets cannot be observed directly, instead
    astronomers must observe stars and look for the
    minute effects that orbiting planets have upon
    them.
  • Radial Velocity
  • Transit Photometry
  • Microlensing
  • Astrometry
  • Direct Imaging

5
Radial Velocity
  • Until the launch of the planet hunting spacecraft
    Kepler in 2009, radial velocity was the most
    effective method for locating extrasolar planets.
  • The vast majority of Exoplanets detected from
    Earth were discovered by this method.

6
Radial Velocity
  • also known as Doppler spectroscopy
  • when a star is orbited by a planet it responds to
    the gravitational tug of its smaller companion.
  • these slight movements affect the star's normal
    light spectrum.
  • If the star is moving towards the observer, its
    spectrum would appear slightly shifted towards
    the blue if it is moving away, it will be
    shifted towards the red.

7
Radial Velocity
  • Drawbacks
  • Can only detect planets accurately that are
    edge-on
  • Cannot accurately determine the mass of a distant
    planet.
  • This is a serious problem because mass is used
    for distinguishing between planets and small
    stars.

8
The sinusoid is the characteristic shape of the
radial velocity graph of a star rocking to the
tug of an orbiting planet. exoplanets.org
9
Transit Photometry
  • Measures the minute dimming of a star as an
    orbiting planet passes between it and the Earth.
  • The passage of a planet between a star and the
    Earth is called a "transit."
  • Dimming detected at regular intervals and lasting
    a fixed length of time, indicates that a planet
    is orbiting the star.

10
Transit Photometry
  • The dimming directly reflects the size ratio
    between the star and the planet
  • A large planet transiting a small star will have
    a more noticeable effect.
  • The size of the host star can be known with from
    its spectrum, photometry therefore gives
    astronomers a good estimate of the orbiting
    planet's size.

11
Transit Photometry
  • Using both methods, scientists can calculate the
    planet's density, an important step towards
    assessing its composition.
  • Additionally, the light from the star passing
    through the planet's atmosphere is absorbed to
    different degrees at different wavelengths.
    Scientists can recreate the absorption spectrum
    and deduce the atmosphere's composition.

12
Transit Photometry
  • The Kepler mission, launched in March of 2009,
    uses photometry to search for extrasolar planets
    from space.
  • The spacecraft's sensitivity is such that it has
    already detected thousands of planetary
    candidates, including several that are
    Earth-sized and orbiting in their star's 
    habitable zone.

13
Transit Photometry
  • Drawbacks
  • The distant planet must pass directly between
    it's star and the Earth the orbital plane must
    be almost exactly "edge-on" to the observer.
  • Transits last only a tiny fraction of its total
    orbital period.
  • A planet might take months or years to complete
    its orbit, but the transit would probably last
    only hours or days.
  • Astronomers need to observe repeated transits
    occurring at regular intervals.

14
An artist's impression of a Jupiter size
extrasolar planet passing in front of its parent
star
15
Microlensing
  • Microlensing is the only method capable of
    discovering planets at great distances from the
    Earth.
  • Microlensing can find planets orbiting stars near
    the center of the galaxy, thousands of
    light-years away.
  • Microlensing, is most sensitive to planets that
    orbit in moderate to large distances from their
    star.

16
Microlensing
  • When the light emanating from a star passes very
    close to another star (the lensing star), the
    gravity of the lensing star will slightly bend
    the light rays from the source star.
  • If the source star is positioned precisely behind
    the lensing star, this effect is multiplied.
  • If a planet is positioned close enough to the
    lensing star, the planet's own gravity bends the
    light stream and temporarily produces a third
    image of the source star.

17
Microlensing
  • This effect appears as a temporary spike of
    brightness, lasting several hours to several days
  • Such spikes indicate the presence of a planet.
  • The precise characteristics of the microlensing
    light-curve, its intensity and length, allow
    scientists to deduce the planets total mass,
    orbit, and period.

18
Microlensing
  • Drawbacks
  • microlensing is dependent on rare and random
    events
  • microlensing events do not repeat themselves
  • the distance of the detected planet and its star
    from the Earth is known only by rough
    approximation

19
The microlensing process. In the fourth image
from the right the planet adds its own
microlensing effect, creating the two
characteristic spikes in the light curve.
20
Astrometry
  • Astrometry is the science of precision
    measurement of stars' locations in the sky.
  • Planet hunters look for a minute but regular
    wobble in a star's position. If such a periodic
    shift is detected, it is almost certain that the
    star is being orbited by a companion planet.

21
Astrometry
  • Until recently, the level of precision required
    to detect the slight shifts in a star's position
    was at the outer edge of technological
    feasibility
  • The Keck telescopes in Hawaii, the largest in the
    world, are being fitted for astrometrical
    measurements

22
Astrometry
  • Astrometry is most effective when the orbital
    plane is "face on" (perpendicular) to an
    observer's line of sight
  • Excels in detecting planets of long periods,
    orbiting further away from their star.

23
Astrometry
  • Drawbacks
  • Atmospheric interference limits the accuracy of
    ground-based measurements
  • Can only detect the component of a star's wobble
    that moves it side to side
  • Can only be used for relatively close stars
  • A star must be observed continuously for years or
    even decades
  • No confirmed planets discovered by this method,
    due to the precision required

24
An artist's conception of Gaia spacecraft.
Launched Dec. 19, 2013.
25
Direct Imagining
  • Direct imaging of exoplanets is extremely
    difficult, and in most cases impossible.
  • Being small and dim, planets are easily lost in
    the brilliant glare of the giant stars they
    orbit.
  • There are special circumstances in which a planet
    can be directly observed.

26
Direct Imaging
  • For humans seeing is believing, this is the
    only method that allows us to see
  • Works best for big, bright planets that orbit at
    a great distance from their stars.

27
Direct Imaging
  • Drawbacks
  • Only possible on very special circumstances.

28
Hubble Space Telescope image of planet Fomalhaut
b orbiting the star Fomalhaut. (A coronagraph
blocks out the star and accounts for the dark
region at the center of the image).
29
Technology
  • Radial Velocity super sensitive spectrographs
  • Transit Photometry ground based photometers and
    Kepler space observatory
  • Microlensing ground based observatories
  • Astrometry Keck Telescope, Gaia space
    observatory
  • Direct Imaging visible and infrared. ground
    based and space telescopes (Hubble, VLT, etc)

30
Exoplanet Examples
  • 51 Pegasi b
  • First exoplanet discovered around a Sun-like
    star
  • Announced Oct 6, 1995
  • Method Radial Velocity
  • Has a mass about half of Jupiter and orbits much
    closer than Mercury.
  • The discovery of other similar exoplanets forces
    scientists to re-examine theories of solar system
    formation.

31
Exoplanet Examples
  • Fomalhaut b
  • Orbits star Fomalhaut
  • Announced 2008. Confirmed 2012
  • Method direct imagining using Hubble telescope.
  • Star is surrounded by a thick disk of gas and
    dust. Located the planet in images of the disk.
  • Very luminous believe that it is surrounded by a
    ring system thicker than that of Saturn.

32
Exoplanet Examples
  • Alpha Centauri Bb
  • Closest exoplanet
  • Orbits star Alpha Centauri B
  • Announced October 2012
  • Method radial velocity
  • Great debate. Remains unconfirmed as a planet.

33
News update
  • http//www.nasa.gov/ames/kepler/nasas-kepler-missi
    on-announces-a-planet-bonanza/
  • http//www.nasa.gov/ames/kepler/kepler-marks-five-
    years-in-space/
  • http//www.nasa.gov/ames/kepler/kepler-mission-man
    ager-update-loss-of-a-science-module/
  • http//www.nasa.gov/ames/kepler/kepler-mission-man
    ager-update-k2-spacecraft-operation-tests-continue
    /

34
references
  • http//www.planetary.org/explore/space-topics/exop
    lanets/
  • http//exoplanetarchive.ipac.caltech.edu/
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