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Mon, Jun 01, 2009

JPL Team Discovers New Planet

Jupiter-Sized Body Is 20 Light-Years Away

This new neighbor is practically next door, as distances in space go. The newfound "exoplanet", called VB 10b, is about 20 light-years away in the constellation Aquila. It is a gas giant, with a mass six times that of Jupiter's, and an orbit far enough away from its star to be labeled a "cold Jupiter" similar to our own. In reality, scientists say, the planet's own internal heat would give it an Earth-like temperature.

The exoplanet was found using a technique called astrometry, which was first attempted 50 years ago to search for planets outside our solar system. It involves measuring the precise motions of a star on the sky as an unseen planet tugs the star back and forth. But the method requires very precise measurements over long periods of time, and until now, has failed to turn up any exoplanets.

For the past 12 years a team of two astronomers from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory has been mounting an astrometry instrument to a telescope at the Palomar Observatory near San Diego. After careful, intermittent observations of 30 stars, the team identified this new exoplanet around one of them -- the first ever to be discovered around a star using the technique.

The finding confirms that astrometry could be a powerful planet-hunting technique for both ground- and space-based telescopes. For example, a similar technique would be used by SIM Lite, a NASA concept for a space-based mission that is currently being explored.

Other ground-based planet-hunting techniques in wide use include radial velocity and the transit method. Like astrometry, radial velocity detects the wobble of a star, but it measures Doppler shifts in the star's light caused by motion toward and away from us. The transit method looks for dips in a star's brightness as orbiting planets pass by and block the light. NASA's space-based Kepler mission, which began searching for planets on May 12, will use the transit method to look for Earth-like worlds around stars similar to the sun.

"This is an exciting discovery because it shows that planets can be found around extremely light-weight stars," said Wesley Traub, the chief scientist for NASA's Exoplanet Exploration Program at JPL. "This is a hint that nature likes to form planets, even around stars very different from the sun."

FMI: http://planetquest.jpl.nasa.gov

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