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TOPIC: Extrasolar Planets


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RE: Extrasolar Planets
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Exoplanets
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Title: Alien Maps of an Ocean-Bearing World
Authors: N.B. Cowan, E. Agol, V.S. Meadows, T. Robinson (University of Washington), T.A. Livengood, D. Deming (NASA Goddard), C.M. Lisse (Johns Hopkins), M.F. A'Hearn, D.D. Wellnitz (University of Maryland), S. Seager (MIT), D. Charbonneau (Harvard)

To simulate the kinds of observations that will eventually be obtained for exoplanets, the Deep Impact spacecraft obtained light curves of Earth at seven wavebands spanning 300-1000 nm as part of the EPOXI mission of opportunity. In this paper we analyse disc-integrated light curves, treating Earth as if it were an exoplanet, to determine if we can detect the presence of oceans and continents. We present two observations each spanning one day, taken at gibbous phases. The rotation of the planet leads to diurnal albedo variations of 15-30%, with the largest relative changes occurring at the reddest wavelengths. To characterize these variations in an unbiased manner we carry out a principal component analysis of the multi-band light curves; this analysis reveals that 98% of the diurnal colour changes of Earth are due to only 2 dominant eigencolours. We use the time-variations of these two eigencolours to construct longitudinal maps of the Earth, treating it as a non-uniform Lambert sphere. We find that the spectral and spatial distributions of the eigencolours correspond to cloud-free continents and oceans; this despite the fact that our observations were taken on days with typical cloud cover. We also find that the near-infrared wavebands are particularly useful in distinguishing between land and water. Based on this experiment we conclude that it should be possible to infer the existence of water oceans on exoplanets with time-resolved broadband observations taken by a large space-based coronagraphic telescope.

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New technique could find water on Earth-like planets orbiting distant suns
Since the early 1990s astronomers have discovered more than 300 planets orbiting stars other than our sun, nearly all of them gas giants like Jupiter. Powerful space telescopes, such as the one that is central to NASA's recently launched Kepler Mission, will make it easier to spot much smaller rocky extrasolar planets, or exoplanets, more similar to Earth.
But seen from dozens of light years away, an Earth-like exoplanet will appear in telescopes as little more than a "pale blue dot," the term coined by the late astronomer Carl Sagan to describe how Earth appeared in a 1990 photograph taken by the Voyager spacecraft from near the edge of the solar system.
Using instruments aboard the Deep Impact spacecraft, a team of astronomers and astrobiologists has devised a technique to tell whether such a planet harbours liquid water, which in turn could tell whether it might be able to support life.

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Super-Earth
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Title: A Super-Earth caught in a trap
Authors: Edyta Podlewska, Ewa Szuszkiewicz (Institute of Physics and CASA*, University of Szczecin, Poland)

This paper is an extension of the work done by Pierens & Nelson (2008) in which they have investigated the behaviour of a two-planet system embedded in a protoplanetary disc. They have put a Jupiter mass gas giant on the internal orbit and a lower mass planet on the external one. We consider here a similar problem taking into account a gas giant with masses in the range of 0.5 to 1 Jupiter mass and a Super-Earth as the outermost planet. By changing disc parameters and planet masses we have succeeded in getting the convergent migration which allows for the possibility of their resonant locking. However, in the case in which the gas giant has the mass of Jupiter, before any mean motion first order commensurability could be achieved, the Super-Earth is caught in a trap when it is very close to the edge of the gap opened by the giant planet. This confirms the result obtained by Pierens & Nelson (2008) in their simulations. Additionally, we have found that, in a very thin disc, an apsidal resonance is observed in the system if the Super-Earth is captured in the trap. Moreover, the eccentricity of the small planet remains low, while that of the gas giant increases slightly due to the imbalance between Lindblad and corotational resonances. We have also studied analogous systems in which the gas giant is allowed to take Sub-Jupiter masses. In this case, after performing an extensive survey over all possible parameters, we have succeeded in getting the 1:2 mean motion resonant configuration only in a disc with low aspect ratio and low surface density. However, the resonance is maintained just for few thousand orbits. Thus, we conclude that for typical protoplanetary discs the mean motion commensurabilities are rare if the Super-Earth is located on the external orbit relative to the gas giant.

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The Crowded Universe
Planets, planets everywhere. Many have been detected in our cosmic neighbourhood, but none of them resemble our own. One planet guru thinks that is about to change. He argues in his new book that we are on the verge of uncovering a universe crowded with Earths.
Alan Boss, a research scientist at the Carnegie Institution of Washington, is well-known for his work on theories of planet formation. He has been in the thick of NASA's planet search for over 20 years, and has become a frequent commentator (and widely-read blogger) on scientific developments in this field. His book, "The Crowded Universe," provides a play-by-play analysis of the planet detections, mission design decisions and theoretical breakthroughs of the past 15 years.

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U.S. astronomers say some of the hundreds of planets that once orbited stars outside our solar system may have fallen into their stars and no longer exist.
University of Washington astronomer Rory Barnes says recent computer modelling has provided the first evidence gravitational forces might pull a planet into its parent star.


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Missing Exoplanets
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During the last two decades, astronomers have found hundreds of planets orbiting stars outside our solar system. New research indicates they might have found even more except for one thing - some planets have fallen into their stars and simply no longer exist.
The idea that gravitational forces might pull a planet into its parent star has been predicted by computer models only in the last year or so, and this is the first evidence that such planet destruction has already occurred, said University of Washington astronomer Rory Barnes.

"When we look at the observed properties of extrasolar planets, we can see that this has already happened - some extrasolar planets have already fallen into their stars" - Rory Barnes.

Computer models can show where planets should line up in a particular star system, but direct observations show that some systems are missing planets close to the stars where models say they should be

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Lightest exoplanet yet discovered
Well-known exoplanet researcher Michel Mayor today announced the discovery of the lightest exoplanet found so far. The planet, "e", in the famous system Gliese 581, is only about twice the mass of our Earth. The team also refined the orbit of the planet Gliese 581 d, first discovered in 2007, placing it well within the habitable zone, where liquid water oceans could exist. These amazing discoveries are the outcome of more than four years of observations using the most successful low-mass-exoplanet hunter in the world, the HARPS spectrograph attached to the 3.6-metre ESO telescope at La Silla, Chile.

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This week the Moon will gradually appear as a narrowing slither of a crescent before reaching New Moon next Saturday. But look closely at the darkened portion of the crescent Moon and it is not quite as dark as might be assumed - there is a dim glow where the Earth reflects light on to the Moons surface. This faint light is called earthshine and is intriguing astronomers because it may help to search for other Earth-like planets in outer space.

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Scientists have found what could be a glimpse of the end of the world during research into the make-up of dying stars.
Dust particles contained in a type of burnt-out star known as "white dwarfs" could be the remnants of planets similar to our own, they concluded.
An international team, which included Dr Jay Farihi of the University of Leicester, found evidence that between one and three per cent of white dwarfs could once have had their own solar systems.


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