planet: Discovery of the Extrasolar Planets
Discovery of the Extrasolar Planets
Although speculation concerning the existence of extrasolar planets (or exoplanets) and planetary systems dates back to antiquity, it was not until the last decade of the 20th cent. that astronomical tools and techniques made their detection possible. Because stars are so distant and bright and an extrasolar planet, no matter how large, is relatively small and dim, it cannot be seen or photographed directly. Its presence may be inferred from a periodic wobble in the spectrum of a target star's frequencies. This wobble, produced by gravitational influences, causes tiny shifts in the star's frequencies that are caught by telescopes and analyzed to yield information on the body affecting the star. Another technique that proved fruitful in 1999 is the use of a telescope to record the dimming of light from a star when a planet's orbit carries it between the star and the earth.
Spurred on by the discovery of three bodies orbiting a pulsar by radio astronomers in 1992, the first extrasolar planet orbiting a sunlike star was detected in 1995. Located in the constellation Pegasus, about 40 light-years from earth, the planet—called 51 Pegasi—has about half the mass of Jupiter and is so close to the star that it has a surface temperature of about 1,000℃ and completes its orbit in only four days. By the end of the decade, more than two dozen extrasolar planets were detected, including three orbiting the star Upsilon Andromedae—the first multiplanet extrasolar planetary system—that were discovered in 1999. By 2020 the number of known exoplanets exceeded 4,100, and more than 700 multiplanet systems had been identified. It is now believed that planets are more common than stars, that some 40% of sunlike stars have planetary systems, and that roughly one quarter of all stars have potentially habitable planets.
The
Super-Earths (1.2–1.9 times the size of the earth's radius) or sub-Neptunes (1.9–3.1 times bigger than the earth's radius) make up the overwhelming majority of exoplanets discovered by
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- Discovery of the Extrasolar Planets
- Identification of the Solar Planets
- Classification of the Sun's Major Planets
- Bibliography
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2024, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
See more Encyclopedia articles on: Astronomy: General