FUP T-SHIRTS DISCOUNTS

FIRST EVER Pictures of Alien Planetary Systems.

This has to be the most BREAKING news for astronomy enthusiasts.

They have found, not ONE, but TWO planetary system with planets orbiting around a star which is basically, the same as how Earth orbits around a star/sun too.

The first planetary system is found by using the Hubble Space Telescope.
Well, from the image above, you cant really see anything, so how’s this?


What you are looking at is 250 trillion kilometres away, that’s a few freaking light years away already.

Explanation:
The picture as a whole needs some splainin’. The star in question is Fomalhaut, a star easily visible to the unaided eye; it’s the brightest star in the constellation of Piscis Austrinus, the 18th brightest in the sky, and only 25 light years away. It’s literally millions of times brighter than the planet, so the Hubble camera uses an occulting bar, a small piece of metal that blocks the brightest part of the star’s image. The blacked-out area in the center of the picture is where Fomalhaut is (also, the star’s image has been digitally subtracted using an image of another star as a template; that further reduces the amount of unwanted light). The radial lines are not real; they are an optical effect of the very bright star. The ring is real; it’s dust leftover from the formation of the star and the planet. In fact, the thinness of the ring was a big factor in assuming a planet was lurking there; the planet’s gravity sculpts the ring, keeping it narrowly confined. Also, the ring is off-center from the star, and a planet in an elliptical orbit would explain that nicely.

The planet itself is just that small dot, almost lost in the noise from the star and the light from the ring. I’ll be honest; had I been analyzing the image, I might have missed it at first. But it’s there, and it’s real. Images taken almost two years apart show that the planet is moving with the star, and is consistent with it orbiting Fomalhaut at a distance of about 18 billion km (11 billion miles). That’s four times the distance of Neptune from the Sun. It takes 872 years to make one complete orbit. The mass is not easy to determine, and is estimated using its effect on the ring; it’s likely to be about the same size and mass as Jupiter.

The planet is unnamed, and is simply called Fomalhaut b.

And the next image is from Gemini North 8 meter telescope, of another planetary system!

The 2 planets orbiting are labeled b and c.

Explanation:
The star is called HR 8799. It’s a bit more massive (1.5 times) and more luminous (5x) than the Sun, and lies about 130 light years from Earth. The planets in this picture orbit it at distances of 6 billion km (3.6 billion miles) and 10.5 billion km (6.3 billion miles). A third planet, not seen in this image but discovered later using the Keck 10 meter telescope, orbits the star closer in at a distance of 3.8 billion km (2.3 billion miles).

So there it is. The first ever family portrait of a planetary system.

One thing that makes these particular planets a bit easier to find than usual is that they are young; HR 8799 and its children are only about 60 million years old. That means the planets are still glowing from the leftover heat of their formation, and that adds to their brightness. Eventually (in millions of years), as they cool, they will glow only by reflected light from the star, and be far harder to see. Fomalhaut b, in the Hubble image, is much older (200 million years), and glows only by reflected light from Fomalhaut. If it were much smaller or dimmer (or closer to the blinding light of the star), we wouldn’t have been able to see it at all.

And these are other excerpts from the author of the original story and i thought it made a really good read:

These images were basically science fiction just a few years ago. Now they are fact. We have an optical picture of a planet orbiting another sun-like star, and a picture of two planets orbiting another star.

Wow. Just wow.

OK, now that you have the news, a few caveats. We now know of more than 300 planets orbiting other stars. And a planet has been imaged before, but it was orbiting a brown dwarf, which is different than a normal star like the Sun. Brown dwarfs are so-called “failed stars”, much smaller than the Sun. Another possible planet orbiting a sun-like star has been imaged, but has not yet been confirmed. So these images here really are firsts. They are history.

But there’s nothing like a picture. There, with your own eyes, you can see for yourself that other planets exist.

In a few years, we’ll have more pictures like these. And we’ll get better. Our telescopes will get bigger, our equipment more sensitive, our techniques improved as we understand their capabilities. And the pictures of other planets will roll in.

How long before we see the Holy Grail, the first image of a terrestrial planet, orbiting a star like the Sun at just the right distance for liquid water to bathe its surface? It may not be for a decade or two, but mark my words: that day will arrive.

[from Discover Magazine]

  • Related Posts


  • Post a Comment or Leave a Trackback

    5 Comments

    1. Posted November 15, 2008 at 4:09 pm | Permalink

      after reading it i still don’t know what it is all about..

    2. Posted November 15, 2008 at 10:24 pm | Permalink

      Huh? I thought we already found 300+ planets? That’s not called planetary systems? Anyway it’s not alien planetary systems since we didn’t find aliens yet.

    3. Posted November 16, 2008 at 11:48 am | Permalink

      wow cool la… Some day, we might be having msn with aliens…

    4. Posted November 16, 2008 at 12:53 pm | Permalink

      hi guys :)
      hmm by alien i mean something like:
      3. Dissimilar, inconsistent, or opposed, as in nature: emotions alien to her temperament.

      but yeah, they found 300+ planets but these are the first pictures ever. So it’s quite a breakthrough i think.

    5. Posted November 16, 2008 at 4:03 pm | Permalink

      I didn’t understand any of that, but yay?

    Post a Comment

    Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *

    *
    *
    Add to Technorati Favorites Entertainment Blogs - Blog Top Sites i am at ping.sg NO BUNS NO LIFE @ MYBLOGLOG NBNL AT singapore blog directory NBNL Blog - Blog Catalog SGBlog.com eDirectory.sg - Singapore Directory TopOfBlogs NBNL

    © 2008 NO BUNS NO LIFE. Stock is Violator, Modified by NBNL