Two new planets discovered!

In a January 17, 1996 meeting of the American Astronomical Society in San Antonio, Texas, astronomers announced the discovery of two Jupiter-sized planets within about 35 light years of the Earth. They are believed to have surface temperatures such that water can exist in liquid form.

The discovery was made by astronomers Geoffrey Marcy, a professor of physics and astronomy at San Francisco State University, and Paul Butler, a postdoctoral researcher with a joint appointment at the University of California at Berkeley and San Francisco State University. They were the same astronomers who confirmed the first discovery of a planet outside our solar system, at 51 Pegasi.

The finding is significant for several reasons. After the planet orbiting 51 Pegasi was discovered, scientists couldn't be sure that planets were commonplace around stars, as they only had a single observation to go on. With the new discoveries, planets do not appear to be rare objects in the universe.

Secondly, the fact that the planets have temperatures at which liquid water is likely to occur is exciting to those looking for support of life existing elsewhere than just on our own Earth.

Using the 120-inch Shane reflector telescope at the University of California's Lick Observatory the astronomers used a highly accurate spectrometer to detect Doppler shifts in the stars' spectral lines, enabling them to determine the stars' radial motions to an accuracy of three metres per second. This accuracy allowed them to detect the tiny wobbles in the star's motion caused by the orbiting planets. They achieved this extraordinary accuracy by placing a glass chamber filled with iodine gas in front of the telescope so that light from the star passes through and is partly absorbed. The known absorption spectrum of iodine is then superimposed on the star's true spectrum, allowing them to determine the Doppler shift. By averaging 500 such measurements over time, a very precise determination of the star's motion can be found.

More new planets are expected to be announced in the near future, now that the instrument to detect them has been developed. Marcy and Butler started the program in 1987 and have been monitoring 120 stars between 10 and 100 light years from the Earth.

70 Virginis

One planet was found to be orbiting 70 Virginis, a G4V sunlike star in the constellation Virgo visible to the naked eye. It orbits the star in an eccentric orbit every 116 days, and has a mass about nine times that of Jupiter. Based on the star's type and the planet's distance, scientists calculate that it may have a surface temperature of approximately 85 degrees C. This temperature is cool enough to permit not only liquid water to exist, but also complex organic molecules.

47 Ursae Majoris

The other planet was detected orbiting 47 Ursae Majoris. Again, the star is similar to our Sun with a spectral type of G1-VFe-0.5. The planet has a period of approximately 1100 days, a mass about three times that of Jupiter, and is situated about twice the Earth-Sun distance from its parent star. Again, its temperature is cool enough to allow for liquid water and organic molecules.