NASA'S
KEPLER MISSION
DISCOVERS TWO PLANETS TRANSITING SAME STAR
From
NASA
Aug.
26, 2010
Kepler's
ultra-precise camera measures tiny decreases in the stars' brightness that
occur when a planet transits them. The size of the planet can be derived from
these temporary dips. The distance of the planet from the star can be
calculated by measuring the time between successive dips as the planet orbits
the star. Small variations in the regularity of these dips can be used to
determine the masses of planets and detect other non-transiting planets in the
system.
In
June, mission scientists submitted findings for peer review that identified
more than 700 planet candidates in the first 43 days of Kepler data. The data
included five additional candidate systems that appear to exhibit more than one
transiting planet. The Kepler team recently identified a sixth target
exhibiting multiple transits and accumulated enough follow-up data to confirm
this multi-planet system.
"Kepler's
high quality data and round-the-clock coverage of transiting objects enable a
whole host of unique measurements to be made of the parent stars and their
planetary systems," said Doug Hudgins, the Kepler program scientist at
NASA Headquarters in Washington.
Scientists
refined the estimates of the masses of the planets using observations from the
W.M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii .
The observations show Kepler-9b is the larger of the two planets, and both have
masses similar to but less than Saturn. Kepler-9b lies closest to the star with
an orbit of about 19 days, while Kepler-9c has an orbit of about 38 days. By
observing several transits by each planet over the seven months of data, the
time between successive transits could be analyzed.
"This
discovery is the first clear detection of significant changes in the intervals
from one planetary transit to the next, what we call transit timing
variations," said Matthew Holman, a Kepler mission scientist from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center
for Astrophysics in Cambridge ,
Mass. "This is evidence of
the gravitational interaction between the two planets as seen by the Kepler
spacecraft."
In
addition to the two confirmed giant planets, Kepler scientists also have
identified what appears to be a third, much smaller transit signature in the
observations of Kepler-9. That signature is consistent with the transits of a
super-Earth-sized planet about 1.5 times the radius of Earth in a scorching,
near-sun 1.6 day-orbit. Additional observations are required to determine
whether this signal is indeed a planet or an astronomical phenomenon that
mimics the appearance of a transit.
[Finding more planets is always good news. The more planets
out there, the more environments there are for life to emerge and evolve which
increases the odds that one day either we’ll find them or they’ll find us. So,
pretty cool…..]
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