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Methods for the detection of exosolar planets Astronomical Seminar January 2004 Erik Butz
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Overview Introduction Today‘s methods Future prospects Summary
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Introduction Big question of mankind: Are we alone in the universe? Many speculations: Mars, Venus and other planets in the solar system Search for exosolar planets was hopeless for several centuries because of insufficient sensitivity of instrumentation and because of enormous distances
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Introduction 2 Key technique for first discoveries developed by Christian Doppler in 1842: Through shift in spectral lines, velocity of an object can be determined
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Introduction 3 1992 first planet around pulsar found (OBS! Not using radial velocity method!) Pulsar timing: Systematic variation in arrival of pulsar pulses
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Introduction 4 1995 first planet around Main Sequence(MS) Star (51 Peg) Since then: More than 110 planets found!
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Today‘s methods Several searches ongoing using Radial Veclocity technique Measurement of Doppler shift in the spectrum of the star due to gravitational influence of the planet.
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Planetary Doppler Shift 1 Source: www.Extrasolar.net
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Planetary Doppler Shift 2
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Planetary Doppler Shift 3
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Planetary Doppler Shift 4 Long struggle to reach sufficient sensitivities Jupiter causes shift of 15 m/s Compare to line-width ~km/s
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Planetary Doppler Shift 5 Breakthrough hoped for at 10 m/s First groups were unlucky: Did not find planet with sensitivity of 10 m/s 51 Peg: 50 m/s => would not have been a problem
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Planetary Doppler Shift 6
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Planetary Doppler Shift 7 Todays precision:~2 m/s Compare to: Earth:0.1 m/s No Earth finder with present doppler methods!
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Planetary Doppler Shift 8 Advantages: Enables finding of planet with comparably low effort Can be used on smaller telescopes as well Disadvantages: Deviation is ~M P => easier to find larger planets and smaller periods =>shorter observation times Due to orbital inclination no direct determination of M P
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Planetary Doppler Shift 9 Only determination of M P sin i
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Todays methods 2 Complementary searches using astrometric measurements Measurement of systematic variations of star position also because of gravitational influence of planet
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Astrometry 1 Star‘s apperent path due to planet is ellipse with major half axis : Effect is larger for nearby stars If M *, a and d known: Determination of M P Deviation for Jupiter in d ~ 10 pc is of order of milliarcsec or lower
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Astrometry 2
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Astrometry 3
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Astrometry 4 Problem: milliarcsec precision only reached in radio Hipparcos: ~1 milliarcsec VLTI(not yet available): 10-100µarcsec
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Astrometry 5 Future: µarcsec astrometry possible, but: Earth moves sun about 500 km 0,03 % Sunspots and other dynamic instabilities 0.5 %
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Today‘s methods 3 Luminosity variation during Transits of planets Problems: Situation is highly improbable Effect is small: Sun/Jupiter in 10 pc: ~2% (0.02 m )
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Transits 1 Advantages: Feasible with low effort Can be done with many stars in short time
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Transits 2
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Transits 3
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Future prospects Imaging of planets in IR and VIS Problems:
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Interferometric imaging 1 Ratio in IR (i.e. at max Planet ) 10 5 better Furthermore: interferometry to further reduce starlight Nulling interferometry: destructive interference at star position but not at planet position
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Summary Several methods for discovery of exosolar planets More then 110 planets found Future methods will enable more discoveries and deeper investigation With Transits: Atmosphere‘s =>signatures of life With extremely large(150 mirrors of 1 m 150 km baseline) space telescope imaging on exosolar planets
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