First Reflected Light From an Exoplanet Seen 72
Roland Piquepaille writes "European astronomers have for the first time ever been able to detect and monitor the visible light that is scattered in the atmosphere of an exoplanet. Designated HD 189733b, also known as a 'hot Jupiter,' orbits a star slightly cooler and less massive than the Sun about 60 light-years from Earth. According to a Zurich news release, 'Polarization technique focuses limelight,' the researchers used 'techniques similar to how Polaroid sunglasses filter away reflected sunlight to reduce glare. They also directly traced the orbit of the planet, a feat of visualization not possible using indirect methods.' The team thinks that their findings are opening new opportunities for exploring physical conditions on exoplanets."
you dont want to know. (Score:4, Funny)
I've given my girlfriend a "hot Jupiter" before, but I didn't know it had an official scientific serial number.
Re:you dont want to know. (Score:4, Funny)
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the true inevitable joke... (Score:1)
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If that involves a large red spot in her lower hemisphere, you may want to think about going to a clinic...
goatse (Score:1)
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If only... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:If only... (Score:5, Funny)
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Alright, you owe me a new keyboard.
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[1]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Webb [wikipedia.org] "In 1987, he served as Secretary of the Navy...Webb resigned in 1988 after refusing to agree to reduce the size of the Navy."
Requiring a footnote for a joke is a clear indicator that it's not funny, but, then again, neither was the 2006 Senate campaign in Virginia.
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There, fixed it for you...
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Is this a mirror of the planet, or another mirror of the goatse? I want to know whether I should be disgusted or not.
Mirror (Score:1)
Polaroid Sunglasses? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Polaroid Sunglasses? (Score:5, Informative)
You are right, Polaroid is a name brand, but they do make sunglasses [polaroideyewear.com].
One definition from Dictionary.com [reference.com]: a brand of material for producing polarized light from unpolarized light by dichroism, consisting typically of a stretched sheet of colorless plastic treated with an iodine solution so as to have long, thin, parallel chains of polymeric molecules containing conductive iodine atoms. It is used widely in optical and lighting devices to reduce glare.
... it doesn't just refer to the cameras.
Mod Up (Score:1)
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Re:Polaroid Sunglasses? (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Polaroid Sunglasses? (Score:5, Informative)
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So... (Score:2, Interesting)
in other news (Score:1)
Well (Score:1, Funny)
Exoplanet (Score:4, Funny)
XO -planet
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Or did you really expect the very first reflected light ever seen from an exoplanet to be anything remarkable to a layperson?
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The picture would show nothing more than a blurry spot, with one pixel slightly different from the others.
Or did you really expect the very first reflected light ever seen from an exoplanet to be anything remarkable to a layperson?
I was hoping for nothing short of a photo of Elvis waving back to the graceland faithful.
Re:Where is the picture? (Score:4, Interesting)
The picture would show nothing more than a blurry spot, with one pixel slightly different from the others.
Yeah, but now, that pixel's spectrum would be quite interesting.
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more info (Score:4, Interesting)
"Hot Jupiters [wikipedia.org] (also called roasters, epistellar jovians, pegasids or pegasean planets) are a class of extrasolar planets whose mass is close to or exceeds that of Jupiter"
I figured Hot Jubiter implied "hotter than" but I guess that's not the case.
Re:more info (Score:4, Informative)
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Could some planet start as a 10 Jupiter mass close in giant, and end up with 1 or 2 Jupiter masses left after a big star just a million miles or so away went through at least one actual Nova and subsequent collapse to pulsar, and then a smaller, equally near star went through a small red giant phases and collapse to a white dwarf? It sounds a bit improbable, but what if the small mass star is exactly between the gas giant and the large mass star when the big one Novas?
Note: For anyone who knows a little astrophysics, yes a typical white dwarf star is very hot, i.e. the surface temperature may be 23,000 K as opposed to our sun's modest 5,700 K, but the actual amount of heat emitted is very much smaller due to the small surface area. It takes a high mass (0.91 solar masses plus) white dwarf to have a zone around it hot enough for a planet to have liquid water at all. (So yes, they could have very close in but still cold Jovians).
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Re:epistellar jovians (Score:1)
Oh, Come On!! (Score:2, Funny)
This is
Future possibilities (Score:4, Interesting)
If an exoplanet can be directly imaged in this manner, does that mean some of the techniques used on stars for inferring the existence of exoplanets (wobbling, dimming etc) can be used to detect exomoons?
This would be a great breakthrough if it were possible, seeing as most of the exoplanets we know about are gas giants and if they host life it is likely to be on their moons.
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Since moons tend to have no or very thin atmospheres, finding oxygen on them would be hard, and free oxygen would probably be the best proof of life that we can find on exoplanets with current technology. So even though moons probably are likely places for life, it will be very hard to prove its there.
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Titan has an atmosphere, and from what I understand it is very similar to that of a primodial Earth. Had Saturn been located within the Sun's habitable zone, I don't see any reason why complex life could've evolved there. Its not out of the question therefore for an exomoon to have an oxygen atmosphere.
Another possible location for life is on icy moons of a further away gas giant. In our solar system such moons emit water vapour from their surfaces. This may be an avenue for detection.