ScienceDaily: Latest Science News
Breaking science news and articles on global warming, extrasolar planets, stem cells, bird flu, autism, nanotechnology, dinosaurs, evolution -- the latest discoveries in astronomy, anthropology, biology, chemistry, climate and environment, computers, engineering, health and medicine, math, physics, psychology, technology, and more -- from the world's leading universities and research organizations.
Planets abound: Astronomers estimate that at least 100 billion planets populate the galaxy
http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/9-j2mUpl-FM/130103143422.htm
Jan 3rd 2013, 19:34
Jan. 3, 2013 — Look up at the night sky and you'll see stars, sure. But you're also seeing planets -- billions and billions of them. At least.
That's the conclusion of a new study by astronomers at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) that provides yet more evidence that planetary systems are the cosmic norm. The team made their estimate while analyzing planets orbiting a star called Kepler-32 -- planets that are representative, they say, of the vast majority in the galaxy and thus serve as a perfect case study for understanding how most planets form.
"There's at least 100 billion planets in the galaxy -- just our galaxy," says John Johnson, assistant professor of planetary astronomy at Caltech and coauthor of the study, which was recently accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. "That's mind-boggling."
"It's a staggering number, if you think about it," adds Jonathan Swift, a postdoc at Caltech and lead author of the paper. "Basically there's one of these planets per star."
The planetary system in question, which was detected by the Kepler space telescope, contains five planets. The existence of two of those planets have already been confirmed by other astronomers. The Caltech team confirmed the remaining three, then analyzed the five-planet system and compared it to other systems found by the Kepler mission.
The planets orbit a star that is an M dwarf -- a type that accounts for about three-quarters of all stars in the Milky Way. The five planets, which are similar in size to Earth and orbit close to their star, are also typical of the class of planets that the telescope has discovered orbiting other M dwarfs, Swift says. Therefore, the majority of planets in the galaxy probably have characteristics comparable to those of the five planets.
While this particular system may not be unique, what does set it apart is its coincidental orientation: the orbits of the planets lie in a plane that's positioned such that Kepler views the system edge-on. Due to this rare orientation, each planet blocks Kepler -32's starlight as it passes between the star and the Kepler telescope.
By analyzing changes in the star's brightness, the astronomers were able to determine the planets' characteristics, such as their sizes and orbital periods. This orientation therefore provides an opportunity to study the system in great detail -- and because the planets represent the vast majority of planets that are thought to populate the galaxy, the team says, the system also can help astronomers better understand planet formation in general.
"I usually try not to call things 'Rosetta stones,' but this is as close to a Rosetta stone as anything I've seen," Johnson says. "It's like unlocking a language that we're trying to understand -- the language of planet formation."
One of the fundamental questions regarding the origin of planets is how many of them there are. Like the Caltech group, other teams of astronomers have estimated that there is roughly one planet per star, but this is the first time researchers have made such an estimate by studying M-dwarf systems, the most numerous population of planets known.
To do that calculation, the Caltech team determined the probability that an M-dwarf system would provide Kepler-32's edge-on orientation. Combining that probability with the number of planetary systems Kepler is able to detect, the astronomers calculated that there is, on average, one planet for every one of the approximately 100 billion stars in the galaxy. But their analysis only considers planets that are in close orbits around M dwarfs -- not the outer planets of an M-dwarf system, or those orbiting other kinds of stars. As a result, they say, their estimate is conservative. In fact, says Swift, a more accurate estimate that includes data from other analyses could lead to an average of two planets per star.
M-dwarf systems like Kepler-32's are quite different from our own solar system. For one, M dwarfs are cooler and much smaller than the sun. Kepler-32, for example, has half the mass of the sun and half its radius. The radii of its five planets range from 0.8 to 2.7 times that of Earth, and those planets orbit extremely close to their star. The whole system fits within just over a tenth of an astronomical unit (the average distance between Earth and the sun) -- a distance that is about a third of the radius of Mercury's orbit around the sun. The fact that M-dwarf systems vastly outnumber other kinds of systems carries a profound implication, according to Johnson, which is that our solar system is extremely rare. "It's just a weirdo," he says.
The fact that the planets in M-dwarf systems are so close to their stars doesn't necessarily mean that they're fiery, hellish worlds unsuitable for life, the astronomers say. Indeed, because M dwarfs are small and cool, their temperate zone -- also known as the "habitable zone," the region where liquid water might exist -- is also further inward. Even though only the outermost of Kepler-32's five planets lies in its temperate zone, many other M dwarf systems have more planets that sit right in their temperate zones.
As for how the Kepler-32 system formed, no one knows yet. But the team says its analysis places constraints on possible mechanisms. For example, the results suggest that the planets all formed farther away from the star than they are now, and migrated inward over time.
Like all planets, the ones around Kepler-32 formed from a proto-planetary disk -- a disk of dust and gas that clumped up into planets around the star. The astronomers estimated that the mass of the disk within the region of the five planets was about as much as that of three Jupiters. But other studies of proto-planetary disks have shown that three Jupiter masses can't be squeezed into such a tiny area so close to a star, suggesting to the Caltech team that the planets around Kepler-32 initially formed farther out.
Another line of evidence relates to the fact that M dwarfs shine brighter and hotter when they are young, when planets would be forming. Kepler-32 would have been too hot for dust -- a key planet-building ingredient -- to even exist in such close proximity to the star. Previously, other astronomers had determined that the third and fourth planets from the star are not very dense, meaning that they are likely made of volatile compounds such as carbon dioxide, methane, or other ices and gases, the Caltech team says. However, those volatile compounds could not have existed in the hotter zones close to the star.
Finally, the Caltech astronomers discovered that three of the planets have orbits that are related to one another in a very specific way. One planet's orbital period lasts twice as long as another's, and the third planet's lasts three times as long as the latter's. Planets don't fall into this kind of arrangement immediately upon forming, Johnson says. Instead, the planets must have started their orbits farther away from the star before moving inward over time and settling into their current configuration.
"You look in detail at the architecture of this very special planetary system, and you're forced into saying these planets formed farther out and moved in," Johnson explains.
The implications of a galaxy chock full of planets are far-reaching, the researchers say. "It's really fundamental from an origins standpoint," says Swift, who notes that because M dwarfs shine mainly in infrared light, the stars are invisible to the naked eye. "Kepler has enabled us to look up at the sky and know that there are more planets out there than stars we can see."
In addition to Swift and Johnson, the other authors on the Astrophysical Journal paper are Caltech graduate students Timothy Morton and Benjamin Montet; Caltech postdoc Philip Muirhead; former Caltech postdoc Justin Crepp of the University of Notre Dame; and Caltech alumnus Daniel Fabrycky (BS '03) of the University of Chicago. The title of the paper is, "Characterizing the cool KOIS IV: Kepler-32 as a prototype for the formation of compact planetary systems throughout the galaxy." In addition to using Kepler, the astronomers made observations at the W. M. Keck Observatory and with the Robo-AO system at Palomar Observatory. Support for all of the telescopes was provided by the W. M. Keck Foundation, NASA, Caltech, the Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics, the National Science Foundation, the Mt. Cuba Astronomical Foundation, and Samuel Oschin.
Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:
Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:
Story Source:
The above story is reprinted from materials provided by California Institute of Technology. The original article was written by Marcus Woo.
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.
Journal Reference:
Jonathan J. Swift, John Asher Johnson, Timothy D. Morton, Justin R. Crepp, Benjamin T. Montet, Daniel C. Fabrycky, Philip S. Muirhead. Characterizing the Cool KOIs IV: Kepler-32 as a prototype for the formation of compact planetary systems throughout the Galaxy. Astrophysical Journal, 2012; (submitted) [link]
Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.
Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.
This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers. Five Filters recommends: Gaza Blitz - Turmoil And Tragicomedy At The BBC.
You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at http://blogtrottr.com
If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe here:
http://blogtrottr.com/unsubscribe/cz0/tSbHWJ
订阅:
博文评论 (Atom)
博客归档
-
▼
2013
(16909)
-
▼
一月
(1518)
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 家用旗舰易分享 索尼PJ760E试用报告
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: mini卡片机 佳能PowerShot N试用体验
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 国美在线称母婴日销破千万 年内推奶粉全球购
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 国美在线称母婴日销破千万 年内推奶粉全球购
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: Facebook发力治理垃圾账号:卧底黑客论坛取经
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 三大运营商三沙市分公司完成工商注册
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: Facebook发力治理垃圾账号:卧底黑客论坛取经
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: PCWorld:黑莓推新PlayBook概率不大
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: 高通APQ8084处理器首度曝光
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 缝缝补补又一年 CP+首日新镜头与配件汇总
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 高通APQ8084处理器首度曝光
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 索尼A卡口蔡司T* 50mm f/1.4镜头今春上市
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 科学家重新定义宇宙可居住区:地球可能处边缘
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 美军研制“空中潜水艇” :将成超强运输工具
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: Valve创始人:苹果是游戏机市场最大威胁
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 入门双核也玩大屏 华为G510联通版评测
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 花旗:联想维持买入评级 目标价7.8港元
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 徐雷重返京东“独白”:希望外界不要过多解读
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 花旗:联想维持买入评级 目标价7.8港元
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 快讯:爱立信2012年第四季度净亏损10亿美元
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 谷歌获得手机LED闪光灯专利:可设置闪光模式
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: 千万像素智能 诺基亚WP8新机即将亮相MWC
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: 5.7英寸高清巨屏 天语大黄蜂Touch评测
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: 入门双核也玩大屏 华为G510联通版评测
- Solidot: 用UEFI启动Linux导致三星笔记本变砖
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 《新世纪福音战士》限量版宾得Q10真机图赏
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: CP+2013日本横滨开幕:重磅新品纷纷亮相
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 火狐封杀Silverlight和Java插件
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 鲍尔默不惧Dorpbox:称1亿用户不值一提
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 报告称仅13%受访者有意购买黑莓10手机
- Solidot: 过去四个月中国黑客持续攻击NYT
- Solidot: 开源社区新玩法:赏金冒险模式
- ScienceDaily: Latest Science News: NASA launches n...
- 网易科技频道IT业界新闻: 鲍尔默轻视Dropbox 暗示其不是对手
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: SAP确认萧洁云不再担任中国区总裁
- Solidot: 微软拥抱Git
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 诺基亚制造的Android手机曝光
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 生活中的感动:自助婚纱摄影实例解析
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: Android 5.0发布时间曝光
- 网易科技频道IT业界新闻: SAP中国区总裁萧洁云将离职 或因业绩不达标
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 元旦当天Facebook照片上传量达6亿张
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 京东启动高管轮岗制:重召徐雷任高级副总裁
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: LivingSocial去年营收翻番 净亏损6.5亿美元
- 网易科技频道要闻: 新东方坦承过去盲目扩张 将至少裁员1000人
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: 不办发布会 三星GALAXY S Ⅳ将延迟发布
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: 售2.5万 安卓系统诺基亚Vertu Ti曝光
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: Android 5.0发布时间曝光
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 京东启动高管轮岗制:重召徐雷任高级副总裁
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: LivingSocial去年营收翻番 净亏损6.5亿美元
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 三星与黑莓争夺企业市场:受累Android碎片化
- Solidot: RIM更名为黑莓,发布黑莓10
- Solidot: 朝鲜大饥荒传出人吃人
- Solidot: 谁该为中国空气污染问题负责?
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 美加州建成地震预警系统:最早提前1分钟发警告
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 美一男子整容90次变“芭比男友”(图)
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 美专家研制成功无痛注射设备:打针不再疼痛
- ScienceDaily: Latest Science News: New order found...
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 谷歌作为互联网公司 为什么发展千兆光纤?
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 优购CMO徐雷将重返老东家京东任高级副总裁
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 网易门户事业部受销售情况影响取消年终奖
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: 黑莓10系统体验:良好开端 挑战重重
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: 中兴发布5.7英寸720P四核机:Grand Memo
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 超薄可弯曲锌电池 或彻底改变穿戴式设备
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 网易门户事业部受销售情况影响取消年终奖
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 消息称SAP中国区总裁萧洁云将离职
- 网易科技频道要闻: 中华英才网多数高管主动拿钱走人
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: 5英寸大屏 W+G双卡双待三星I9082图赏
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: 1234元双卡四核 天语大黄蜂Kiss评测
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: LG上季度业绩未达预期:电视业务疲软
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 中移动下调国际漫游费为每分钟1至3元
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: Office 365在华发布:年费499元 将持续更新
- Solidot: 一行代码,浏览器变临时编辑器
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 国美在线进军游戏平台:2月1日开放公测
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 转基因之争:争论不止莫若理性筹谋
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 人像摄影师戴维讲解:专业人像简单拍
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 摄影家于云天:佳能5D III拍摄新疆奇美风光
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: 回归直板售499元 诺基亚低端手机2060发布
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: 2月25日揭晓 诺基亚Lumia922即将发布
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: 支持双SIM卡 三星GT-I8262D即将发布
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 研究发现昆虫社会“生男生女”看情况
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 转基因之争:争论不止莫若理性筹谋
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 国美在线进军游戏平台:2月1日开放公测
- Solidot: 朝鲜古拉格出现在Google地图
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 炬力四核大屏 艾诺NOVO10英雄四核1055元
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 让初学者快速上手 六个摄影入门构图技巧
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 骁龙S4双核智能强机 京瓷Torque将上市
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: 2GHz四核5英寸屏 Xperia N概念图曝光
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: BB10 OS全新来袭 黑莓Z10本月30日上市
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: 1080P屏幕 三星GALAXY S IV再次曝光
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 日本聊天应用Line下载量破亿:独特动漫优势
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 微软高管:10年内用户全部购买订购版Office
- Solidot: 北京空气污染正迫使老外撤退
- Solidot: XBMC 12.0 Frodo发布
- 网易数码频道:家电资讯: 曝国美在线非法裁员 部分员工被单方面解约
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 日本聊天应用Line下载量破亿:独特动漫优势
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: Zynga首席游戏设计师离职:人才流失加剧
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 尼康D4发布1.04版固件升级:改善AF-C模式
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 4.3寸双核超薄刀锋 摩托XT910仅1550元
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 五寸屏幕够霸气 联想K860行货仅1999元
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 黑莓10赢得舆论关注:有望借企业功能复兴
-
▼
一月
(1518)
没有评论:
发表评论