A Realm of Planets

More Exoplanet Discoveries

An artist’s concept of the seven planets possibly found orbiting Gliese 667C. Three of them (c, f and e) orbit within the habitable zone of the star. Click to get a larger version. Image courtesy Rene Heller.

The search for exoplanets (also known as extrasolar planets) is a painstaking one. You have to tease out “signals” from the planets, and by that I mean you have to look for evidence of planets in the light from distant stars. If a planet orbiting a star passes in front of its “primary” (its star), that passage dims the light a tiny fraction of a percent. And so, you need a very sensitive light meter attached to your telescope to catch that signal. Likewise, as a planet orbits its primary, it can cause the apparent motion of the star to “wiggle” a bit, and that “signal” shows up in the light streaming from the star. To tease out the wiggles and signals, astronomers break starlight into its component wavelengths (i.e., they take a spectrum) and look for changes in that spectrum. Specific kinds of changes may mean that a planet is affecting the star’s orbit, or causing it to dim down a tiny bit.

There are, however other things that can cause a star to appear to dim down or wiggle in its orbit. For example, it could be a variable star whose light intensity varies a tiny but—just enough to make it seem like a planet is passing between us and the star. Or, the star could be experiencing gravitational perturbations from another nearby star, enough to make it wiggle in its motion. The data not only tell that a planet possibly exists at the star, but also gives astronomers a good idea of what its minimum mass could be.

So, looking for these distant worlds is a complex science. Along the way, astronomers have discovered many new variable stars and even the occasional stellar black holes that affect a star’s light as they pass by. But, often enough, astronomers also find planets. And, that’s when the fun begins. Ground-based observers using large telescopes (larger than you have in your backyard) train their instruments on distant stars with planet candidates and begin the lengthy (often years-long) observations it takes to confirm that a planet is actually orbiting those stars.

Just today, an international team of astronomers, led by Guillem Anglada-Escudé of the University of Göttingen, Germany, and Rory Barnes of the University of Washington announced that they’ve found three “Super-Earth” type planets in the s0-called “habitable zone” of a nearby star. Incredibly enough, this world was previously thought to host two or three planets already, so that brings its possible world count to six or seven. “Super-Earths” are planets that are what they sound like—not more than 10 times more massive than Earth. This is the first time that so many of them have been found orbiting in one system.

The name of the star is GJ 667C, and its actually part of a three-star system that lies in the S-shaped constellation Scorpius. GJ 667C is an M-dwarf star, somewhat fainter than the Sun, and has about a third of the mass that our star does. A star this faint has a habitable zone—the region around it where liquid water could exist on a world—that is very close.  Because the habitable zone is so close to the star, the each planet’s year is much shorter than Earth’s is. They range from 20 and 100 days to go once around the star.  The planets are also very likely “tidally locked,” which means the same hemisphere always faces the star. Luckily astronomers know that life can exist under such conditions.

Since such low-mass stars are inherently faint, their habitable zones—the swath of space that would allow an orbiting rocky planet to sustain liquid water on its surface—lie much closer to the star. The closeness of the habitable zone then makes it easier to find potentially habitable rocky planets around low-mass stars.

In the past few years, astronomers have confirmed at least two planets orbiting this star, and possibly a third one that is still being confirmed. More observations allowed the team to find the new planet candidates. The next steps are to do more observations and detailed study in order to prove that these really are planets. If they are, then there’s a very good chance that this realm of planets will feature worlds with solid surfaces and maybe even atmospheres similar to Earth’s.

That’s the exciting part about planetary searches around other stars. While no one has yet found an Earth analog where life is teeming in oceans or on the surface, the time is drawing near when such a world could be found. It surely does lie out there, somewhere, waiting to be discovered and confirmed.

Did You SuperMoon?

We Didn’t

Everybody was all atwitter over the Supermoon this past weekend. I saw lots of really hyper news stories about this amazing event, and a few really strange posts linking the SuperMoon to all kinds of supernatural things.  SuperMoon really isn’t a term that astronomers use. It was coined by an astrologer, and doesn’t really have any scientific meaning. But, it catches people’s attention and gets them to look at the Moon, which isn’t a bad thing.

Anyway, I assume a lot of people went out, looked at the Full Moon above the horizon (where the Moon usually appears largest) and thought to themselves, “Wow, that is super.”  If that’s what YOU did, that’s great. The Moon did appear slightly larger (although I doubt the average viewer would have noticed exactly HOW much larger), and I hear it was very pretty.

I say that because we got clouded out last night, and I only got a tiny peek at the Moon very late in the evening, high above the mountain behind us. Not that I could have told you, “Oh that Moon looks a few percent bigger than last month”. I do watch the Moon and stars and planets, to be sure. We did hope to see an International Space Station pass last night, too, but the clouds precluded that. Sometimes the clouds get you, and there’s nothing you can do but stay inside and do something else indulgently astronomical. I worked on writing some skygazing material for next month, and did a little research for a script I’m doing about the Moon.

So, I hope if you SuperMooned, it was a great sight. I hope that it piqued your interest about continuing to observe the Moon.  It’s pretty easy to do: you just keep following the Moon’s progress through the sky over the next two weeks. It’ll slowly change shape to a narrow crescent, appearing in the early morning hours. Then, it’ll be New Moon, and shortly thereafter, the first crescent of the next cycle will appear low in the western sky after sunset. This happens month after month, and the beauty of the scene is always breathtakingly lovely. It’ll hook you on Moon-gazing and the next thing you know, you’ll be memorizing craters and maria on the Moon and taking images of it.

Enjoy!