Extrasolar planets: more like home. (Astronomy).A trove of newly discovered planets orbiting other stars suggests that the solar system solar system, the sun and the surrounding planets, natural satellites, dwarf planets, asteroids, meteoroids, and comets that are bound by its gravity. The sun is by far the most massive part of the solar system, containing almost 99.9% of the system's total mass. may not be the oddball it had begun to seem. Among eight newly identified extrasolar planets, three have large, circular orbits that resemble those of the planets in the solar system. One of the planets is at least 80 percent as massive as Jupiter and orbits the star HD 4208. If it were part of the solar system, it would be about as far from the sun as Mars is. Two other planets, each with a minimum mass 2.8 times that of Jupiter, circle the star HD 23079. The new finds, announced Oct. 15, bring the tally of extrasolar planets to nearly 80. In August, when the count was at 70, only two of the planets had orbits large enough and circular enough to resemble the paths of planets in the solar system (SN: 8/18/01, p. 100). All the rest either circle their parent star so closely that they graze its outer atmosphere or they have large, highly elongated e·lon·gate tr. & intr.v. e·lon·gat·ed, e·lon·gat·ing, e·lon·gates To make or grow longer. adj. or elongated 1. Made longer; extended. 2. Having more length than width; slender. paths that bring them alternately very close and very far from their parent star. Planets that lie at greater distances from their parent require a longer time--years rather than months--to be detected. Most of the planetary systems that researchers initially found bear little resemblance to the solar system, says study collaborator Steven S. Vogt of the University of California, Santa Cruz The University of California, Santa Cruz, also known as UC Santa Cruz or UCSC, is a public, collegiate university, one of the ten campuses of the University of California. . After years of observations, "we're starting to see something like second cousins. In a few years, we could be finding brothers and sisters," he says. Each orbiting body is detected indirectly. As it circles the star, it pulls the parent to and fro to and fro adv. Back and forth. to and fro Adverb, adj also to-and-fro 1. . The resulting wobble wobble /wob·ble/ (wob´'l) to move unsteadily or unsurely back and forth or from side to side. See under hypothesis. wob·ble n. 1. shows up as a periodic shift in frequency in the star's light. The technique only measures the wobble along one direction, the line of sight to Earth. That means the method can only provide the minimum mass of an orbiting planet. Because of that limitation, some astronomers have maintained that some declared planets could be considerably heavier than the minimum value, qualifying them either as lightweight stars or failed stars known as brown dwarfs (SN: 10/28/00, p. 277). David C. Black of the Lunar and Planetary Institute The Lunar and Planetary Institute (LPI) is a NASA-funded research institute, dedicated to studies of the solar system, its evolution and formation. The Institute is part of the Universities Space Research Association, located in Houston, Texas. in Houston, a longtime critic of the extrasolar-planet findings, has led the naysayers making this argument. Last year, he was joined by two astronomers who independently studied data from the Hipparcos satellite, which tracked stars across the sky. They reported that two objects earlier identified as extrasolar planets may be heavy enough to be stars. After further analysis, however, the same researchers now conclude that the Hipparcos data lack the sensitivity to say anything definitive about the extrasolar-planet findings. Shay shay n. Informal A chaise. [Back-formation from chaise (taken as pl. )] Noun 1. Zucker and Tsevi Mazeh of Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv University (TAU, אוניברסיטת תל־אביב, את"א) is Israel's largest on-site university. in Israel describe these latest findings in an upcoming ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL. --R.C. |
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