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Extra-Solar Planet Populations George Lebo 10 April 2012 AST 2037 1

Extra-Solar Planet Populations

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Extra-Solar Planet Populations. George Lebo 10 April 2012 AST 2037. 1. Radial Velocity Planet Searches. So … need a speedometer to measure star velocity versus time To a precision of a few meters per second! Across distances of many light years!!!. How? Doppler shift of spectral lines. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Extra-Solar Planet Populations

Extra-Solar Planet Populations

George Lebo10 April 2012

AST 2037

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Page 2: Extra-Solar Planet Populations

Radial Velocity Planet Searches• So … need a speedometer to measure star velocity versus

time• To a precision of a few meters per second!• Across distances of many light years!!!

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• How? Doppler shift of spectral lines

Page 3: Extra-Solar Planet Populations

51 Pegasi• In 1995, Mayor & Queloz announce the discovery of

an orbital signature with amplitude = 50 m/s in a 4.23-day period around star 51 Pegasi

• Mass = 0.5 MJUP First extra-solar planet

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51 Pegasi: Hot Jupiter?• At that location, expected

temperature is VERY high (about 2000K or higher!)

• So … Jupiter-like planet, but closer than Mercury “Hot Jupiter”

• How do you make something like that????

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Planet Bonanza• Geoff Marcy & Paul Butler quickly confirmed 51

Pegasi• They had lots of archival data from searches for

Jupiter-type planets (periods >10 years, so they were still “in progress”)

• No one even thought to look for short-period MASSIVE planets (why would they be easier?)

• Found many “Hot Jupiters” – most extra-solar planets known today are Hot Jupters

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ES-Planet Population

• As of November 19, 2012, 851 planets are known to orbit other stars in 670 Planetary Systems(!!)

• All of this has happened in about 20 years – someone currently finds a new planet every day

• These planets are NOT generally like our Solar System objects – WHY?

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• Planets found so far• Note velocity limits• No Earths so far –

why?

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Upsilon Andromedae• First multiple planet system

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Upsilon AndromedaeA Four-Planet System as of 11/19/12

All Jupiter-Size• First multiple planet system

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HD 209458• Another Hot Jupiter, a = 0.045 AU

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HD 209458• What is a “transit”?

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HD 209458• A transit observed• Note: only ~1% dip

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HD 209458 - Results• Just at the entry moment into transit, for a brief

instant, only the upper atmosphere of the planet absorbs any starlight

• With a powerful enough spectrograph, we can look for absorption lines at this instant

• Result: COMPOSITION of the planet atmosphere• HD 20948b contains – WATER!!

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Sun and Gliese 581 (Red Dwarf)

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Gliese Planetary System

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Gliese 581c• Low-mass planet, with mass 5 Mearth

• Orbit semi-major axis 0.07 AU• Low-mass star

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Planets in Habitable Zones• Several planets are

currently known in the Habitable Zone around their parent stars

• All of these are gas giants no solid surface

• But … gas giants in our Solar System have lots of moons

• What happens to Europa if you move it/Jupiter to a distance of 1 AU?

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Planets in Habitable Zones• What happens to Europa

if you move it/Jupiter to a distance of 1 AU?

• Really?• Europa mass is closer to

our moon’s mass – why no water there?

• So … need giant planets in the HZ with giant moons …

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Planets in Habitable Zones• We don’t see any Earth-

mass planets in the HZ• Does this mean they do

not exist?

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Planets in Habitable Zones• Future experiments will

use other techniques than Doppler shifts to search for planets

• These will have the sensitivity to look for Earth-mass planets in the HZ

• Stay tuned!

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Terrestrial Planet Finder Cancelled, 2011

• Ultra-high-contrast imager satellite• Capable of finding Earth-mass planets in HZ around nearby

stars

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Kepler 22-b, First Earth-Sized Planet in the Habitable Zone of a Sun-Like Star, May 2012

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Summary• We have found hundreds of planets around other stars• Overwhelming majority are massive gas giants, many close

to their parent star• This is because they are easiest to find with the Doppler

technique• Have found: multiple planet systems (20+); planet

atmospheres; some low-mass (probably solid) planets• Eccentricity seems more common than circular orbits;

problems for life• So far, only a few gas giants in the HZ; no solid planets;

maybe moons could host life (??)• Future searches will be sensitive to Earth-mass planets in

the HZ

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