Credit: Copyright 2001 Lynette Cook    
    
    
Explanation:
Watching and waiting,    
astronomers have uncovered the presence of more    
than 70 planets orbiting stars other than the Sun.    
    
So far almost all these    
extrasolar    
planets have crazy elongated orbits,    
lie uncomfortably close to their parent stars, or are found in bizarre,    
inhospitable systems.    
    
Yet a reported new planet    
discovery indicates for the first time that a    
nearby sun-like star, 47 Ursae Majoris (47 UMa), has a system of at    
least two planets in nearly circular orbits more reminiscent of    
Jupiter and    
Saturn in our own    
familiar    
Solar System.    
    
The planets are too distant and faint to be photographed directly.    
    
Still, 13 years of    
spectroscopic observations of 47 UMa have revealed    
the wobbling    
signature of a second planet    
intertwined with one    
previously known.    
    
In this artist's    
illustration, the worlds    
of 47 UMa hang over the rugged volcanic landscape of    
a hypothetical moon.    
    
The moon orbits the    
newly    
discovered planet, imagined here with    
Saturn-like rings, while the previously known planet is visible as a    
tiny crescent, close to the yellowish star.    
    
Closer still to 47 UMa is another tiny dot, a    
hypothetical Earth-like    
water world.    
    
About 51 light-years distant, 47 UMa can be found in planet Earth's    
sky near the Big Dipper.    
    
 Authors & editors: 
Robert Nemiroff
(MTU) &
Jerry Bonnell
(USRA)
NASA Web Site Statements, Warnings,
and Disclaimers
NASA Official:  Jay Norris.
Specific
rights apply.
A service of:
LHEA at
NASA /
GSFC
& Michigan Tech. U.
Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
  