Mercury,
March/April 2004 Table of Contents
by
Ken Rice and Phil Armitage
The
extrasolar planets discovered to this time are believed to be giant
gaseous planets similar to Jupiter and Saturn. Understanding how
large planets form will help us construct an overall picture of
how entire planetary systems form.
Research
into the formation of planets and planetary systems is largely driven
by the desire to understand the origins of life and the possibility
of life elsewhere in the Universe. Until very recently the only
known planetary system was our own solar system. Apart from the
numerous comets and asteroids, it consists of four rocky planets
(Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars), two giant gaseous
planets (Jupiter and Saturn), two ice giant planets
(Uranus and Neptune), and one icy planet with a comparably
sized companion (Pluto and Charon).
In
1995, however, Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz, working at the Geneva
Observatory, reported the discovery of an object with a mass approximately
half that of Jupiter orbiting the star 51 Pegasi. This object was
detected using the radial velocity, or “Doppler wobble,”
technique; the method uncovers the small radial motion imposed by
the orbiting planet on its parent star and manifest as small-scale,
periodic shifts of features in the star’s spectrum. Although
it can be used to calculate accurately the planet’s orbital
period, the Doppler-wobble technique can only determine a lower
limit to the planet’s mass. To date, in excess of 100 such
extrasolar planets, with minimum masses between 1/10 and
just over 10 Jupiter masses, have been discovered, and it is now
safe to say that in most cases the actual planet mass is close to
that calculated.
In
one particular case, the extrasolar planet HD209458b was observed
to eclipse its central star. Not only did this allow astronomers
to determine the planet’s mass almost exactly, but they also
found that this planet has a radius 1.4 times that of Jupiter. This,
together with the large masses of the extrasolar planets discovered
to date, has led researchers to conclude that all the extrasolar
worlds are giant gaseous planets similar to Jupiter and Saturn.
Although it is highly unlikely that any of these planets could harbour
life, an understanding of the formation and evolution of such planets
will aid our understanding of the formation of planets and planetary
systems in general.
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