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 Found far away: 32 new planets 
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Post Found far away: 32 new planets
WASHINGTON — Astronomers have found 32 new planets outside our solar system, adding evidence to the theory that the universe has many places where life could develop.

Scientists using telescopes by the European Southern Observatory telescopes didn’t find any planets quite the size of Earth or any that seemed habitable or even unusual. But their announcement increased the number of planets discovered outside the solar system to more than 400.

Six of the newly found planets are several times bigger than Earth, increasing the population of so-called SuperEarths by more than 30 percent. Most planets discovered so far are far bigger, Jupiter-sized or even larger.

Two of the newly discovered planets were as small as five times the size of Earth and one was up to five times larger than Jupiter.

Astronomer Stephane Udry of the University of Geneva said the results support the theory that planet-formation is common, especially with certain type of common stars.

“I’m pretty confident that there are Earth-like planets everywhere,” Udry said in a Web-based news conference from a conference in Portugal. “Nature doesn’t like a vacuum. If there is space to put a planet there, there will be a planet there.”

What astronomers said is especially exciting is the high percentage — about half — of a type of star systems with relatively light stars that had planets around them. This is more than planet-formation theory expected, astronomers said. Two of the four planets found around these type stars were relatively close to Earth size, said astronomer Xavier Bonfils of Grenoble Observatory in France.

The discoveries were made by the High Accuracy Radial Velocity Planet Searcher, which looks for slight wobbles in a star’s movements, which would be made by the tug of a planet’s gravity on the star. There are no photos of these planets.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/space/6674403.html

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Mon Oct 19, 2009 9:08 am
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Post Re: Found far away: 32 new planets
Just a matter of time. The find rate is becoming exponential. Just a matter of time.

Might be just me but it is a sign of the times, and maybe of our lethargy and interest in the mundane (insert celeb drone story) that this story wasn't front page around the world. Just think how profound this discovery would have been 10 years ago. Our global appetite for headline every 2 minutes, no matter the content, is very telling.

Maybe we are ready for disclosure?? As a populace we would just blow it off 5 minutes later because Jon and Kate have reconciled..... :gah :mrgreen:


Tue Oct 20, 2009 6:43 pm
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Post Re: Found far away: 32 new planets
Crackajack wrote:
Just a matter of time. The find rate is becoming exponential. Just a matter of time.

Maybe we are ready for disclosure?? As a populace we would just blow it off 5 minutes later because Jon and Kate have reconciled..... :gah :mrgreen:


:crylaugh Oh how true is that Cracka :headbang

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Wed Oct 21, 2009 6:03 am
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Post Re: Found far away: 32 new planets
Jon and Kate have reconciled???
Wait, who are Jon and Kate? (jk - I see tabloid headlines but I've never watched the show and I've never read the stories. I'm a "Lost" fanatic and love to read E.W online for Doc Jensen's columns so I couldn't help but notice the names...)


Wed Oct 21, 2009 3:36 pm
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Post Re: Found far away: 32 new planets
Quote:
Astronomers spot 'super-earth' 80 light years away
January 9, 2010 - 11:56AM
This infrared photo provided by NASA and taken by the Spitzer Space Telescope, shows a region of space called W5 where astronomers are looking at planet formation.

Image

US astronomers have detected the second-smallest exoplanet ever discovered with a mass just four times heavier than the Earth, adding to a growing number of low-mass planets dubbed "super-earths".

"This is quite a remarkable discovery," said Andrew Howard, an astronomer at the University of California at Berkeley.

"It shows that we can push down and find smaller and smaller planets," he said in a presentation at the 215th meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Washington DC this week.

The exoplanet, a name given to planets outside our solar system, has been dubbed HD156668b, and is located around 80 light years from Earth in the direction of the Hercules constellation.

A light year is roughly 9460 billion kilometres.

The planet orbits around its parent star in just over four days.

The smallest exoplanet previously discovered by astronomers was Gliese 581 e, detected by a Swiss astronomer in April 2009 some 20.5 light years from Earth in the Balance constellation.

But it orbits much closer to its star, making its temperature much higher than that on earth.

Earlier this week, the scientific team responsible for the Kepler US space telescope - launched in March 2009 to find planets similar to Earth outside our solar system - announced at the same meeting their discovery of five new exoplanets.

All five planets, dubbed Kepler 4b, 5b, 6b, 7b and 8b, have high masses and very high temperatures, ranging from 1200 to 1648 degrees Celsius.

The five Kepler discoveries and HD156668b join more than 400 exoplanets already discovered by astronomers using various terrestrial telescopes since 1995.

Some 423 exoplanets have been identified by astronomers so far, according to specialist site exoplanet.eu, but none appear to be similar to Earth or capable of supporting life.

However, astronomers generally express confidence that either the Kepler telescope or the European Corot telescope will eventually find exoplanets like earth.

John Morse, head of the astrophysics division at NASA headquarters in Washington, said it was "only a matter of time before more Kepler observations lead to smaller planets with longer period orbits, coming closer and closer to the discovery of the first Earth-analogue".

The team of astronomers who discovered HD156668b used one of two Keck telescopes at the 4,145-metre summit of Mount Mauna Kea in Hawaii.

The astronomers used the so-called wobble method, which measures the gravitational effects of a planet on its star.

When the planet passes in front of its star it produces a slight change in the star's colour spectrum, shifting it towards blue.

AFP


http://www.smh.com.au/technology/sci-te ... -lzdl.html


Fri Jan 08, 2010 7:28 pm
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