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NASA’s Kepler spacecraft makes weird discovery of Two Planets Orbiting a …





September 16, 2012 |
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Written by Dr. Tony Phillips
Science at NASA

NASA - National Aeronautics and Space AdministrationWashington, D.C. – News flash: The Milky Way galaxy just got a little weirder.

Back in 2011 astronomers were amazed when NASA’s Kepler spacecraft discovered a planet orbiting a double star system. Such a world, they realized, would have double sunsets and sunrises just like the fictional planet Tatooine in the movie Star Wars. Yet this planet was real.

Now Kepler has discovered a whole system of planets orbiting a double star.

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The star system, known as Kepler-47, is located 4,900 light-years from Earth in the constellation Cygnus. Two stars orbit one another at the center of the system: One is similar to the sun in size, but only 84 percent as bright. The second star is smaller, only one-third the size of the sun and less than 1 percent as bright. Kepler found two planets orbiting this mismatched pair.

“The presence of a full-fledged planetary system orbiting Kepler-47 is an amazing discovery,” says Greg Laughlin, professor of Astrophysics and Planetary Science at the University of California in Santa Cruz. “This is going to change the way we think about the formation of planets.”

The inner planet, Kepler-47b, closely circles the pair of stars, completing each orbit in less than 50 days. Astronomers think it is a sweltering world, where the destruction of methane in its super-heated atmosphere might lead to a thick global haze.  Kepler-47b is about three times the size of Earth.

This diagram compares our own solar system to Kepler-47, a double-star system containing two planets, one orbiting in the so-called habitable zone. (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/T. Pyle)

This diagram compares our own solar system to Kepler-47, a double-star system containing two planets, one orbiting in the so-called “habitable zone.” (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/T. Pyle)

The outer planet, Kepler-47c, orbits every 303 days. This puts it in the system’s habitable zone, a band of orbits that are “just right” for liquid water to exist on the surface of a planet. But does this planet even have a surface?  Possibly not.  The astronomers think it is a gas giant slightly larger than Neptune.


The discovery of planets orbiting double stars means that planetary systems are even weirder and more abundant than previously thought.

“Many stars are part of multiple-star systems where two or more stars orbit one another. The question always has been — do they have planets and planetary systems?” says William Borucki, Kepler mission principal investigator at NASA’s Ames Research Center. “This Kepler discovery proves that they do.”

Our own sun is a single, isolated star, with a relatively simple gravitational field that rules the motions of the planets orbiting it.

But, as Borucki points out, not all stars are single. Astronomers estimate that more than half of the stars in the galaxy have companions. There are double, triple and even quadruple star systems. Any planets in such systems would have to navigate a complex gravitational field, tugged in multiple directions by multiple stars. In fact, for many years, astronomers doubted that planets could even form in such an environment.

Kepler-47 erases those doubts—and poses a conundrum: “These planets are very difficult to form using the currently accepted paradigm,” says Laughlin. “I believe that theorists, myself included, will be going back to the drawing board to try to improve our understanding of how planets are assembled in the dusty gaseous disks that surround many young stars.”

The Kepler spacecraft is on a mission to find Earth-like planets that might support life. Says Borucki: “In our search for habitable worlds, we have just found more opportunities for life to exist.”


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Article source: http://www.clarksvilleonline.com/2012/09/16/nasas-kepler-spacecraft-makes-weird-discovery-of-two-planets-orbiting-a-double-star/

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SDSU Astronomers Discover Planets That Orbit Two Suns

Three studies released Wednesday, in the journal Nature and at the American Astronomical Society’s conference in Austin, Texas, demonstrate an extrasolar real estate boom.

This illustration shows a planetary system orbitting two sun-like stars.

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Above: This illustration shows a planetary system orbitting two sun-like stars.

San Diego State University astronomers, along with a team of scientists, have discovered two more planetary systems with two suns. Before, it was believed planets could only orbit a single sun, because a double sun, also known as a double star, would make the system too chaotic.

“For me its interesting to think about what life would be like on these planets,” said SDSU astronomer Jerome Orosz. “First of all you’d see a double sunrise and a double sun set every day and second of all, your climate would be very very odd because as the stars orbit each other, the distance from the planet to each star is changing and so the amount of sunlight you get is a very complex function of time.”

The two new planets, Kepler-34 b and Kepler-35 b, are gaseous Saturn-size planets. Kepler-34 b orbits its two sun-like stars every 289 days, and the stars themselves orbit and eclipse each other every 28 days.

Orosz said the discovery confirms it’s not a fluke of nature.

“If you look up at the sky at night, half of the stars you see are in double star systems,” explained Orosz. “So the fact that nature can make planets around double stars – it increases the number of places you can look for planetary systems.”

Astronomers are finding other worlds using three different techniques and peering through telescopes in space and on the ground.

Confirmed planets outside our solar system — called exoplanets — now number well over 700, still-to-be-confirmed ones are in the thousands.

NASA’s new Kepler planet-hunting telescope in space is discovering exoplanets that are in a zone friendly to life and detecting planets as small as Earth or even smaller. That is moving the field of looking for some kind of life outside Earth from science fiction toward plain science.

“Nature must like to form planets because it’s forming them in places that are kind of difficult to do,” said San Diego State University astronomy professor William Welsh, who wrote a study about planets with two stars that’s also published in the journal Nature.

The gravity of two stars makes the area near them unstable, Welsh said. So astronomers thought that if a planet formed in that area, it would be torn apart.

Late last year, Kepler telescope found one system with two stars. It was considered a freak. Then Welsh used Kepler to find two more. Now Welsh figures such planetary systems, while not common, are not rare either.

Orosz said now that they know what they’re looking for, it opens up a whole new world of astronomy.

The Associated Press contributed to the information in this report.

Article source: http://www.kpbs.org/news/2012/jan/13/sdsu-astronomers-discover-planets-orbit-two-suns/

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TEMECULA: Students look to the stars

Jupiter was the star of the show at Abby Reinke Elementary
School when the Temecula Valley Astronomers held a recent
stargazing evening event on campus for students and their
families.

It was pitch dark outside and the moon was not visible that
night, but Jupiter was high in the sky and shining so brightly that
it was clearly visible with the naked eye. Under a high-powered
telescope, the planet was even bigger and brighter, to the delight
of many who had never seen Jupiter anywhere but in pictures.

“I see it! It’s white,” said Emily Holter, a seventh-grader at
Temecula Middle School who attended the Oct. 27 Science Night event
with a friend and her family. “It’s pretty cool.”

Emily and her pal, Kassidy Watts, also a seventh-grader, agreed
that looking through the telescopes made them more interested in
the planets.

Six telescopes were set up on the playground after dark for
students and parents to observe the night sky. Some of the
telescopes were pointed at Jupiter, but John Garrett, president of
the Temecula Valley Astronomers, had his telescope trained on the
Andromeda Galaxy.

“There are a few star clusters they can see and some double
stars. A double star is two stars orbiting each other. Half the
stars have a companion star,” Garrett said.

Garrett started the evening off inside the multipurpose room by
giving the attendees a general presentation about the solar system
and astronomy. As darkness fell by 7 p.m., the group moved outside
to look through the telescopes.

The children also enjoyed playing in the dark with glow
bracelets handed out to every child who attended. Cookies and hot
chocolate also were served.

As she looked through Garrett’s telescope, one student asked
Garrett to explain what a galaxy is. He gave a brief explanation
and then told her about the Andromeda Galaxy.

“You’ve just seen something that is 2 1/2 million light years
away,” he said.

Mandy Rayfield, president of the school’s PTA, said she was glad
so many people turned out for the Science Night event —- it was
the first time that Abby Reinke Elementary had invited the Temecula
Valley Astronomers out for a stargazing evening, which about 150
people attended.

Members of the astronomers group frequently visit Southwest
County schools and set up their large telescopes to encourage young
people to become interested in science and astronomy.

It was an easy sell for mom Sumer Dandan, who brought 5-year-old
son Boston, a kindergartner, to Science Night.

“The last three Christmases he’s been asking for a telescope, so
when I saw the flier for this I thought it was perfect,” she said
as Boston got his first look at Jupiter. Also visible through the
telescopes were at least two of Jupiter’s many moons.

Abby Reinke Principal Christine Boyd declared the evening a
success as it wrapped up about 8 p.m.

“I saw the parents having just as much fun as the kids,” she
said.

Article source: http://www.nctimes.com/news/local/temecula/temecula-students-look-to-the-stars/article_3edd704d-3522-5dde-b887-eb0400faacca.html

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Astronomy Open House returns to West campus

Planets, stars and galaxies will come into focus as the Astronomy Open House returns to Arizona State University’s West campus from 7 to 9 p.m., Oct. 27. Hosted by New College of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences faculty member Paul Schimdtke, the star-gazing event takes place along the bike path immediately north of the Central Plant on the west side of campus.

The event is free and open to the public; visitor parking on campus costs $2 per hour.

“We’ve been hosting this event at the West campus at least once each semester since 1997,” said Schmidtke, an astronomer with professional interests in the area of double-star astronomy. “For many who join us, it is the first chance they have had to explore the sky through the lens of a telescope. Depending on sky conditions, there are a number of intriguing sights in the October sky that we expect to be able to see.”

The emphasis will be on Jupiter – but galaxies, double stars, star clusters and a variety of nebulae will also be visible. ASU telescopes will be available for viewing the sky, and members of the Phoenix Astronomical Society will once again support the evening’s activities.

“This is a wonderful opportunity for community members to come to the West campus and peek through a telescope to see what this desert sky has to offer,” said Schmidtke, who teaches general studies astronomy classes at the West campus. “People are so fascinated with the heavens because observing the sky is one activity that binds everyone together. Some people simply appreciate the beauty, while others want to know the details of how things work.”

For more information, contact Schmidtke at paul.schmidtke@asu.edu.

Article source: http://asunews.asu.edu/20111012_astronomy

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Kepler planet circles

Kepler planet circles
two suns

DR EMILY BALDWIN
ASTRONOMY NOW
Posted: 15 September 2011

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The first confirmed example of a planet orbiting two suns has been found in the Kepler dataset.

Kepler-16b is a gaseous world similar to Saturn in terms of size and mass and experiences a surface temperature dipping to
-100 degrees Celsius so it is unlikely to host life, but Kepler scientist and lead author of the study Laurance Doyle says that doesn’t necessarily rule out other double star planets as places to look for life in the future.

“The habitable zone would not be like anything we presently know,” he says. “We usually think of the habitable zone as a spherical shell around the star at a certain radius. But with two stars orbiting around each other in the middle of the stellar system, the habitable zone would be variable as the stars changed their distances from the planets.”

Kepler-16b, shown in this artist’s conception, enjoys double sunsets as it circles a pair of stars. Image: David A. Aguilar (CfA)

The Kepler spacecraft detected the planet using the transit method, that is, looking for the periodic dimming in a star as a planet moves across its face, temporality blocking out some of its light. The detection of Kepler-16b was complicated by the fact that the two stars in the system also eclipsed each other, but since the stars’ brightness dropped even when the stars were not in eclipse, the presence of a third body was inferred. The additional observation that the dimming events occurred at irregular time intervals meant that the stars were in different positions in their orbit each time the third body passed, showing that it was circling both stars.

“I was hoping to find a circumbinary planet in the Kepler data, but Kepler-16 is better than anyone imaged,” Doyle tells Astronomy Now. “The orbits are so exquisitely aligned – the stars with each other and the planet with them – that we have been able to determine the size and mass of each of the stars and planet with unprecedented accuracy.”

Both stars are smaller and cooler than our own Sun, and are orbited by Kepler-16b once every 229 days at a distance of 65 million miles. Follow-up observations by the Tillinghast Reflector Echelle Spectrograph (TRES) on the 60-inch telescope at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory’s Whipple Observatory in Arizona revealed that the two stars orbit each other every 41 days at an average distance of 21 million miles.

Doyle reveals that there are “some good candidates” for further circumbinary planets in the Kepler dataset. “Now that we know how to find them, I think we are going to have quite a few more in the next several months,” he adds.

The results of the discovery are featured in this week’s edition of the journal Science.

Article source: http://www.astronomynow.com/news/n1109/15kepler/

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