New Planets & an Unknown Object Discovered Beyond the Solar System
"It could happen almost any time now. We now have the technological capability to identify Earth-like planets around the smallest stars."
David Latham -Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
As astronomers become more adept at hunting for, and finding, exoplanets orbiting stars beyond the Solar System, international astronomers have figured out just what we should be looking for using the increasingly sophisticated technologies being developed.
Two exoplanets and an unknown celestial object, findings of the European Space Agency's COROT mission, an important stepping stones in the European effort to find habitable, Earth-like planets around other stars. These discoveries mean that the mission has now found a total of four new exoplanets.
COROT has now been operating for 510 days, and the mission started observations of its sixth star field at the beginning of May this year. During this observation phase, which will last 5 months, the spacecraft will simultaneously observe 12,000 stars.
Future telescopes such as NASA's Kepler, set for launch in 2009,
would be able to discover dozens or hundreds of Earth-like worlds. The
Space Interferometry Mission (SIM), to be launched early in the next
decade, consists of multiple telescopes placed along a 30 foot
structure. With an unprecedented resolution approaching the physical
limits of optics, the SIM is so sensitive that it almost defies belief:
orbiting the earth, it can detect the motion of a lantern being waved
by an astronaut on Mars
The SIM, in turn, will pave the way for
the Terrestrial Planet Finder, to be launched late in the next decade,
which should identify even more earth-like planets. It will scan the
brightest 1,000 stars within 50 light years of the earth and will focus
on the 50 to 100 brightest planetary systems. The TPF will allow the
follow-up studies to learn about these planets' rotation and weather,
and the composition of their atmospheres.
All this,
in turn, will stimulate an active effort to determine if any of them
harbor life, perhaps some with civilizations more advanced than ours.
The two new planets discovered by COROT are gas giants of the hot Jupiter type, which orbit very close to their parent star and tend to have extensive atmospheres because heat from the nearby star gives them energy to expand.
“Scientists suspect that with the detection of COROT-exo-3b, they might just have discovered the missing link between stars and planets.”
In addition, an oddity dubbed ‘COROT-exo-3b’ has raised particular interest among astronomers. It appears to be something between a brown dwarf, a sub-stellar object without nuclear fusion at its core but with some stellar characteristics, and a planet. Its radius is too small for it to be a super-planet.
If it is a star, it would be among the smallest ever detected. Follow-up observations from the ground have pinned it at 20 Jupiter masses, which makes it twice as dense as the metal Platinum.
“COROT has also detected extremely faint signals that, if confirmed, could indicate the existence of another exoplanet, as small as 1.7 times Earth’s radius.”
COROT was launched atop the Soyuz from the Baikonour cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on 27 December 2006. Settled in its almost-circular polar orbit ranging between 895 and 906 km above Earth's surface, the spacecraft was first powered on 2 January 2007 and started its science observations on 3 February of the same year.
Exoplanets have rarely been seen; rather, they have been indirectly observed by looking at the influence they exert on stars they orbit. But even with the most advanced telescopes planned by Earth's astronomers for use over the next several years, a planet orbiting another star would only appear as a single pixel. By comparison, a simple cellphone camera typically takes pictures with about a million pixels, or one megapixel. However, a great deal of information about a planet can be gleaned from that single pixel and the way it changes over time.
Analyzing the data would work for any world that has continents and bodies of liquid on its surface plus clouds in its atmosphere, even if those were made of very different materials on an alien world. For example, icy worlds with seas of liquid methane, like Saturn's moon Titan, or very hot worlds with oceans of molten silicate (which is solid rock on Earth), would show up similarly across the vastness of space.
However, the method depends on clouds covering only part of a planet's surface, regardless of what each world is made of. Saturn's Titan, for example, covered by perpetual global smog, would not give up the mysteries of its weather or rotation, nor would the boiling hot Venus, with its complete shroud of clouds.
The key, the astronomers learned after studying data from Earth's weather satellites, is that while clouds vary from day to day, there are overall patterns that stay relatively constant, associated with where arid or rainy landmasses are. Detecting those repeating patterns would allow distant astronomers to figure out the planet's rotation period because a brightening associated with clouds above a particular continent would show up regularly once each "day," whatever the length of that day might be. Once the day's length is determined, then any variations in that period would reveal the changing weather--that is, clouds in a different place than the average.
Planned telescopes such as NASA's Kepler, set for launch in 2009, would be able to discover dozens or hundreds of Earth-like worlds. Then even more advanced space observatories being considered, such as NASA's Terrestrial Planet Finder, would allow the follow-up studies to learn about these planets' rotation and weather, and the composition of their atmospheres.
"Maybe somebody's looking at us right now, finding out what our rotation rate is -- that is, the length of our day," says Sara Seager, associate professor of physics and the Ellen Swallow Richards Associate Professor of Planetary Sciences at MIT.
Among other things alien astronomers could probably tell that our planet's surface is divided between oceans and continents, and learn a little bit about the dynamics of our weather systems and whether its a good day for a landing.
Posted by Casey Kazan.
Related Galaxy posts:
Astronomers from NASA, Harvard and U of Colorado: "May be on Brink of Finding Habitable Second Earth"
SETI's Search for ET Goes Exponential
Cruising the Goldilocks Zone -The Search for "Super-Earths"
Non-Carbon Lifeforms -Why We May Overlook
Earth's Twin Habitable?
280 & Counting -New Rocky ExoPlanet Discovered in Constellation Leo
Chile's Atacama Desert -World's Space-Observatory Mecca
NASA's "New Worlds Observer" Will be Able to Spot Oceans, Continents and Clouds on Small Rocky Planets
Dead Zones in the Search for Extraterrestrial Life
New Technologies & the Search for Extraterrestrial Life -A Galaxy Insight
http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEM9E91YUFF_index_0.html
http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2007/earth-et-1220.html







Interesting or much more than interesting.....
These new telescopes will completely revert old credences and 'credos' about the usual question are we alone ?...or better 'is there anybody out there ? ' like in a famous UK song...of the old days.
Fantastic .....the new 'credence' is the following : In our galaxy.....there are NOT many reasons to believe that the many 'G stars' like our (the Sun or Sol) ...should NOT have metallic (or better rocky)planets like Mercury or Venus or the Earth or Mars.
Is anybody thinking that this is incorrect ??
If so why so much effort to invent and put on orbit fantastic interferometres with extraordinary optics and CCD sensors ??
Yes there guys out-there......somewhat rather far away...in spite of their superfantastic optics and interferemetres and God only knows what other magic technology...
Hence we are all happy about this : us and them...
Good discover of exoplanets 'earth like.....'
and anyway regards...
Posted by: claudio | February 12, 2009 at 01:01 PM
Added to the Astronomy Link List
Posted by: Astronomy Link List | February 13, 2009 at 01:58 AM
I was wondering, when these exoplanets are identified, does SETI use its technology to investigate those areas? Or is that too far off?
Posted by: maudyfish | February 13, 2009 at 05:53 AM
Why are you asking your questions here,, all this sites does it re-post, if you actually want to learn any thing you should check out the sources, because this site is crap..
http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEM9E91YUFF_index_0.html
http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2007/earth-et-1220.html
Posted by: Kim | February 13, 2009 at 08:48 AM
Wow, I wonder what it could be?
RT
www.anon-tools.us.tc
Posted by: Johnny Mason | February 13, 2009 at 08:50 AM
Thanks Kim for giving me some resources.... FYI: I find some peoples comments on here very interesting, and whether you like this site or not, many of us laymen and laywomen enjoy reading them.
Posted by: maudyfish | February 13, 2009 at 09:24 AM
Great article. Thanks for the information.
Posted by: How to Free Xbox 360 | February 13, 2009 at 09:25 AM
Don't automatically jump to the sensational conclusion that there's going to be life there, or at least life that we could recognize as such. ( civilization, culture, technologies. ) There's a tendency to get over - excited about these discoveries as if we're going to find signs of intelligent life there leaving undeniable evidence of itself.
If we find irrefutable evidence of life there, it'll be interesting, though.
Posted by: EvilCosmicMonkey from Knoxville | February 13, 2009 at 11:48 AM
Who really cares? it would be more useful to scan our immediate vicinity for minerals, asteroids and meteors that could potentially cause trouble to our lives.
Posted by: Anaman | February 13, 2009 at 07:32 PM
wooooooow that's awesome.
Posted by: frightling | February 22, 2009 at 07:45 PM
wooooooow that's awesome.
Posted by: frightling | February 22, 2009 at 07:47 PM
If there is life out there it could be sometipe of robot like the transformers or cylons(cgi ones rule!).And what about that planet like object? If its emitting weird signals could it be a dyson sphere?Wouldnt it be awesome though if kepler finds a halo like ringworld!Would love to play a blood gulch paintball game on it! Who knows. Mabey we were created by some aliens or we are the aliens and life here could have began out there. At any rate it would at least give seti ideas on where to listen.
Posted by: Astronut | March 06, 2009 at 08:15 PM
sorry i love u
Posted by: ur breath | March 24, 2009 at 03:27 PM
lame u think this is awsome?
Posted by: uj | March 30, 2009 at 11:27 AM
diz lame crap u think diz iz awsome?do ya huh
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Posted by: uj | March 30, 2009 at 11:30 AM
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Posted by: Carolina | April 06, 2009 at 11:02 AM
i wonder if there life out there
Posted by: sergio estrada | May 05, 2009 at 08:33 AM
i cannot know the new planet and what names new planet?
Posted by: ahmad luqman and syed | June 17, 2009 at 11:00 PM
i am so bored of "what if " speculations..i want to know what they wont tell us....bazzillions of dollars spent on a SETI project to find signlas that might not be be out there???...lmao i dont think so, and only a moron beleivs there cover up crap..so dont go tellin me "what if" theories and tell me what we already know but they hide from us
Posted by: astrophysicboy | August 18, 2009 at 08:19 PM
i want 2 know how does they looks like!!!!!!!
and when ,on wich year will they come!!!!!
anf if they come it will be may be dangerous on us bc everything we did to repare our counties it will go like nothing !!!!!!!! are they aliens ????
every one who said that the new planet isn't something interresting he's wrong !!!!!
Posted by: hala &friends | September 22, 2009 at 02:19 AM