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www.astro.washington.edu/obser vatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th , 2005
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Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

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Page 1: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/

Extra-Solar Planets

Theodore Jacobson Observatory

University of Washington

Brian Stephanik

October 5th, 2005

Page 2: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

Topics for tonight

What are (extra-solar) planets?Very brief historyDetectionThe presentThe future

Page 3: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

Where do planets fit in?

Asteroids, planets, and stars: where to draw the line? Rocky core – gaseous atmosphere – nuclear fusion On-going debate: Pluto

Page 4: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

History

A very new science– Last 15 years

1989 – Mention of (possible) extra-solar planets in a research paper

1993 – Confirmed detection1995 – Main sequence detection: 51 PegasiLate 1990s – Large number of discoveries due to

advances in technology– CCDs, telescopes, etc.

Page 5: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

Detection

Stars outshine their planets– Direct detection is difficult

Need to be clever1. Astrometry

2. Occultation

3. Doppler

4. Microlensing

(Scary names, not so scary ideas)

Page 6: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

Detection #1: astrometry

“Star wobble”– Playground connection

• Teeter-Totter & Center of Mass

– Key idea: Objects orbit around the center of mass - even stars!

– Viewed from “above”

– First attempted: 1943

– Not used today: technology

Page 7: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

Detection #2: occultation

Who turned off the lights?– Venus transit & lunar

eclipse

What happens on Earth during a lunar eclipse?

Key idea: planets block light from stars

Page 8: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

Detection #2: occultation

Page 9: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

Detection #3: Doppler

Radial velocity– Doppler effect for sound

• What sound does a speeding ambulance make?

– Radar guns

– Viewed “edge-on”

– Key idea: moving sources appear to change their frequency

Page 10: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

Detection #4: microlensing

Einstein– Massive objects bend light.– Some of this (extra) bent

light arrives at Earth.– Causes objects to appear

brighter (more light rays).

– Key idea: objects with mass bend light (toward Earth, perhaps)

– What do one of these look like? And how would a planet affect it?

Page 11: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

Detection #4: microlensing

This is not the light form the host star.

Page 12: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

Detection: a summary

Astrometry– Star wobble

Occultation– Transit

Doppler effect– Think speeding sirens

Microlensing– Oddness of otherwise smooth light curve

Page 13: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

So what do we know?

Page 14: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

The present

Today: 160+ known ESPs

June 2005: Gliese 867

Most ESPs are HUGE!– Why is this?

Page 15: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

Why are ESPs big

Teeter-totter– BIG

• 1st grader invites friends• 5th grader must move out to balance• 5th grader (sun) farther from center of mass

– CLOSE• Time…• Closer planets move faster

Page 16: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

The present: first image

Page 17: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

What does tomorrow hold?

Page 18: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

The future

TPL: Terrestrial Planet Finder 2014 and 2020 launches Interferometry: directly observe light from a planet Spectroscopy on atmosphere of planet

Page 19: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

The future is tomorrow!

Thursday, Oct 6, 4:00pmPhysics/Astro Auditorium: A102

Jian Ge, University of Florida: An All Sky Extrasolar Planet Survey with the Sloan

Telescope Detection between 2008-2020

– Monitor 1,000,000 nearby stars

– Tens of thousands of new ESPs possible

Page 20: Www.astro.washington.edu/observatory/ Extra-Solar Planets Theodore Jacobson Observatory University of Washington Brian Stephanik October 5 th, 2005.

Thank you

Questions?