
 www.astrosociety.org/uitc
No. 
  19 - Winter 1991-92
© 
  1992, Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 390 Ashton Avenue, San Francisco, 
  CA 94112

  
The 
  Search for Planets Around Other Stars
 
by Andrew Fraknoi, 
  Astronomical Society of the Pacific  
 The question of 
  whether there are planets outside our Solar System has intrigued scientists, 
  science fiction writers and poets for years. But how can we know if any really 
  exist? We devote this issue of The Universe in the Classroom to 
  the search for planets around other stars. 
 
Stars are huge luminous 
balls of gas powered by nuclear reactions at their centers. The enormously high 
temperatures and pressures in the core of a star force atoms of hydrogen to fuse 
together and become helium atoms, releasing tremendous amounts of energy in the 
process. Planets are much smaller with core temperatures and pressures too low 
for nuclear fusion to occur. Thus they emit no light of their own. When you see 
Venus or Jupiter in the night sky, you're really seeing sunlight reflected by 
those planets back to you.  
 Some planets, 
  like Earth and Mars are solid rocky bodies, but others, like Jupiter and Saturn 
  are mostly gas and liquid. Jupiter, the largest planet in our solar system, 
  is roughly 300 times more massive than the Earth, but only one-thousandth the 
  mass of the Sun. However, had Jupiter been 75 times more massive, it would just 
  have been large enough for the pressures and temperatures at its core to ignite 
  nuclear fusion, and the Earth would have had two Suns in our skies.  
We think our own Solar 
System formed as a natural by-product of the formation of the Sun. About five 
billion years ago, a huge, amorphous cloud of gas and dust, thousands of times 
larger than the present Solar System, began to contract. The exact reason why 
the contraction began is not clear; one idea is that a nearby exploding star gave 
it a push. But once started, the cloud collapsed under its own gravity, with most 
of the gas and dust falling to the center to form the Sun. The remaining material 
fell into a broad, flattened disk. Throughout the disk, dust grains orbiting the 
proto-Sun collided with one another, occasionally sticking together. Small clumps 
joined together to make ever larger ones, eventually forming the planets. This 
process of accumulating material is called accretion. According to 
this scenario, planets are a natural by-product of the formation of the Sun. Thus 
astronomers think many stars like the Sun should have planets.  
Because planets are 
small, appear to lie close to their parent star, and shine only by reflected starlight, 
the faint glimmer of a planet is lost in the brilliant glare from its parent star. 
Imagine suspending a grain of rice an inch or two from a lighted 100 Watt light 
bulb. Someone standing at the end of a long dark hall would see only the light 
bulb, not the grain of rice. It's the same with planets and stars. Consider the 
case of Jupiter and the Sun. Jupiter is only a tenth the size and has one hundredth 
the surface area of the Sun. As seen from the nearest star, Alpha Centauri, mighty 
Jupiter would appear extremely faint, a billionth as bright as the Sun. 
Jupiter would also appear extremely close to the Sun, a mere four arc seconds 
away (an arc second is a unit of angular measurement equal to the apparent size 
of a U.S. quarter from a distance of five kilometers or three miles). An Alpha 
Centauran, with equipment similar to our best instruments on our largest telescopes, 
would simply not be able to see Jupiter in the glare of the Sun. Since most stars 
are much farther away than Alpha Centauri, there is little chance of seeing or 
photographing individual planets around other stars.  
  
      | 
  
  
    | The star moving in 
      a straight line has no planets; the one which "wobbles" around 
      a straight path is being influenced by an unseen planet's orbital motion. 
      (Diagram courtesy David C. Black, NASA Ames Research Center) | 
  
Although we cannot 
see the planet itself, we can see the effect of the gravitational tug the planet 
exerts on its parent star. As the planet revolves around the star, it pulls the 
star first one way, then the other. The more massive the planet, the more noticeable 
its effect on the star will be. As the star moves through space, the planet's 
tugs show up as tiny deviations from a straight-line path. That's because the 
star and the planet actually move around the center of mass of the star-planet 
system, the point where one would balance a seesaw holding the star on one end 
and the planet on the other. For example, the Sun is a thousand times more massive 
than Jupiter, so the center of mass of the Sun-Jupiter system lies very close 
to the Sun. Nevertheless, an extraterrestrial observer measuring the Sun's motion 
through space would detect a slight wobble in the Sun's path, a wobble with a 
period of twelve years, the same time it takes Jupiter to orbit once around the 
center of mass. Smaller planets like the Earth also cause perturbations on the 
Sun's orbit, but they are so tiny they couldn't be detected across interstellar 
distances. Analysis of the wobbles can give information about the planet's mass, 
orbit, period and distance from the star.  
 If we make extremely 
  detailed measurements of a star's position, accurate to one-thousandth of an 
  arc second, we might be able to see wobbles in its motion due to a large unseen 
  companion. Current techniques in astrometry, the branch of astronomy 
  that deals with measuring positions of stars, are becoming capable of detecting 
  Jupiter-sized planets around nearby stars.  
Several stars do indeed 
seem to follow slightly wavy paths through space. Some astronomers have reported 
that a few stars have companions with masses similar to that of Jupiter (perhaps 
the most famous is Barnard's Star), but other astronomers have been unable 
to confirm these claims. Astrometric observations are extremely difficult to make 
since the sought-after wiggles are very small, about one-thousandth the size of 
a star's image on an astronomical photograph. One problem is that the errors inherent 
in making the observations and measurements are about the same size as the planetary-induced 
wiggles astronomers are seeking, making it very difficult to be sure if a measured 
wobble is real. So far there have been no uncontested detections of planets from 
stellar wobbles.  
Barnard's Star is 
a faint, red star about two-tenths as massive as the Sun. It is six light years 
away (fourth closest star to the Sun), and has the largest proper motion (angular 
motion across the sky) of any known star. In 1963, Peter van de Kamp, then director 
of Swarthmore College's Sproul Observatory, announced that, based on an analysis 
of its motion, Barnard's Star had an unseen companion. Van de Kamp estimated that 
the companion was 50 percent heavier than Jupiter, much too small to be a star. 
Six years later, van de Kamp revised his analysis and declared that Barnard's 
Star actually had two planetary companions, one 0.7 times the mass of Jupiter, 
the other half Jupiter's mass. It seemed that the first real planetary system 
had been found around another star.  
 But other astronomers, 
  using different telescopes, didn't see any evidence of van de Kamp's perturbations 
  when they studied the motion of Barnard's Star. Critics questioned his procedures 
  and charged that he had not properly corrected for small changes in his telescope 
  over time, especially when its lenses were cleaned and reinstalled. So far, 
  no one has been able to duplicate his results. Van de Kamp still believes in 
  his perturbations and his two-planet interpretation. But most astronomers today 
  doubt they are real.  
A planet's gravitational 
tug on a star can also be seen in measurements of the star's radial velocity, 
its motion toward or away from us along the line of sight from Earth to the star. 
As the star orbits the system's center of mass, it alternately moves toward, then 
away from us. Features in the star's rainbow-like spectrum are Doppler shifted 
slightly toward the blue end of the spectrum when the star is approaching and 
toward the red end when it is receding. It's the same principle that causes the 
sound waves in a police car's siren to change pitch as it approaches you, and 
then recedes from you. Because a star is much more massive than a planet, the 
size of the Doppler shift is extremely small, requiring very sophisticated instruments 
to measure it.  
 Bruce Campbell 
  of the Dominion Astrophysical Observatory in Victoria, British Columbia has 
  studied a number of nearby stars, looking for subtle shifts in radial velocity. 
  About half show velocity variations indicative of possible planet-sized companions 
  from one to ten times Jupiter's mass. But variations in the star itself, pulsations, 
  for example, could also cause small radial velocity changes like those observed. 
  If these pulsations are periodic, they could easily be mistaken for planetary 
  companions. There are ways to tell planets from pulsations, but they require 
  years of painstaking observations and analysis, which have not yet been completed. 
  Nevertheless, these observations remain some of the more promising candidates 
  for extrasolar planetary systems.  
In 1983, the Infra-Red 
Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) surveyed the sky, measuring 
the heat given off by astronomical objects. Among its many discoveries was that 
several nearby stars, including the bright stars Vega and Fomalhaut, 
are surrounded by shells or disks of orbiting solid particles. Most of the disks 
stretch several hundred AU from their parent stars (one Astronomical Unit, or 
AU, is the distance from the Sun to the Earth, about 150 million kilometers or 
93 million miles). In the case of Vega (the brightest star in the constellation 
Lyra) the disk extends out 7.4 billion miles from the star, or about twice the 
distance from the Sun to Pluto, our farthest planet. Astronomers think that the 
disks are remnants of the formation of the star, and possibly an early stage in 
the formation of a planetary system.  
 Astronomers have 
  also found disks of material around a class of very young stars called T 
  Tauri stars (named after the prototype star in the constellation of Taurus). 
  Disks of material seem to be a common attribute of young stars. But they are 
  not planetary systems. There is no way to tell for sure if there are planets 
  present in addition to the disks, if the disks will some day form planets, or 
  if the disks are all that will ever be there. But they do indicate that solid 
  matter can form in a disk-like configuration very similar to the one out of 
  which astronomers think our Solar System condensed.  
Pulsars are 
compact, ultra-dense, rapidly spinning stars with strong magnetic fields, believed 
to be born in the fiery debris of a supernova explosion, the enormously 
powerful death throes of a giant star. As the pulsar spins on its axis several 
times a second, a powerful pulse of energy sweeps by the Earth, rather like the 
rotating beacon of an interstellar lighthouse. These pulses are normally very 
regular, but last July, British astronomer Andrew Lyne and colleagues found that 
the radio pulses from one pulsar had a puzzling variation. At first the signals 
arrived a hundredth of a second earlier than average. Three months later they 
were a hundredth of a second late. After another three months it was early again, 
and so on. Lyne thought the radio pulse variations were Doppler shifts as the 
pulsar, tugged by an unseen companion about ten times the mass of the Earth, orbited 
a center of mass.  
 Several months 
  later, Alexander Wolszczan, of the Arecibo Radio Observatory in Puerto Rico, 
  and Dale Frail, of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, reported semi-regular 
  variations in radio pulses from a different pulsar. They concluded that this 
  pulsar has two companions, each about 3 times the mass of the Earth. They also 
  reported a possible third planet about the same size as Earth. 
 But in January 
  1992, Lyne reported that his team had not properly removed the effects of the 
  Earth's motion around the Sun from their analysis, and, when the calculations 
  were redone correctly, the pulse variations disappeared. There was no planet. 
  The variations Wolszczan and Frail noticed are too complex to be caused by the 
  Earth's motion, but most astronomers are waiting for more information before 
  deciding if Wolszczan and Frail have indeed detected planets around a pulsar. 
   
Summary
The search for planets 
outside our Solar System is a difficult one, hampered by the extremely large distances 
between stars and the inherent faintness of the objects we seek. So far, there 
is no proof that any star other than the Sun has planets circling it. There are 
several tantalizing hints and possible detections, but none is without controversy. 
As Percival Lowell, a 19th century astronomer who saw seasonal variations in the 
surface markings of Mars and convinced himself he was seeing evidence of a dying 
civilization (later proven to be wrong), once said: "When dealing with the most 
far-reaching scientific questions, it can be hard to separate one's science from 
one's imagination." Still, in the next few years, better instruments and more 
sophisticated techniques may yet tell us whether planets exist around other stars. 
 
by Thomas Hockey, 
University of Northern Iowa  
Materials
  - Elongated rubber 
    pet toy  
  
 - Two rubber or 
    plastic balls (of similar size but unequal mass)  
  
 - Bright sticker 
    (phosphorescent sticker is optional)  
  
 - Phosphorescent 
    ball (or a ball painted with phosphorescent paint)  
 

Instructions
Attach the two rubber 
balls to the pet toy. The "double loop" design of the toy holds the balls in place 
without fasteners. When tossed, the model turns end over end; the two balls revolve 
around a point on the toy, the center of mass. Ask students to estimate where 
the center of mass is located. They can then determine experimentally where this 
center is by placing the model on a finger - the center of mass occurs where the 
model balances. Students may be surprised that this point is not situated half 
way between the balls but at a point closer to the more-massive ball. Mark the 
center of mass with a bright sticker. Now throw the model again. The balls will 
revolve around an axis beneath the sticker. If one of the balls is exchanged with 
a more or less massive one, the sticker will no longer remain "steady" in flight 
but will itself revolve around the new center of mass.  
 To illustrate 
  the astrometric wobble of a star with a planetary companion, remove the two 
  balls from the toy. Turn off the classroom lights. Toss the phosphorescent ball 
  by itself and ask the students to observe the relatively simple curve of its 
  path (analogous to a star with no planets). Then place the phosphorescent ball 
  in the small loop of the toy (leaving the other loop empty, symbolizing a planet 
  with much less mass than its star) without the students knowing it. Toss the 
  model once again in darkness, and note the more complicated path of the glowing 
  ball. Ask the students to hypothesize why the apparent motion of the ball differed 
  between the two tosses. Then show them the model with the lights on, and discuss 
  the empty loop's role as an unseen planetary companion. Finally you can toss 
  the model again, this time with phosphorescent paint or a phosphorescent sticker 
  applied to the center of mass.  

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