Tracking the Weather On an Exoplanet 43
schwit1 writes: Scientists have begun gathering increasingly detailed information about the atmosphere and weather on the exoplanet HD189733B, 63 light years away with an orbit that produces a transit every 2.2 days. The temperature appears to rise with increasing altitude, reaching 3,000 degrees at the top of the atmosphere. There are also strong winds blowing from the cold to the hot side of the planet.
Small Correction (Score:5, Informative)
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Re: Small Correction (Score:2)
Why never 'a'? Have checked a few online sources and can't find the reason.
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My guess, the star is "a", the number is the catalog name of the star, and the things which orbit it are derived from that.
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Alpha Centauri B Flat?
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Wondering... (Score:3)
...how long it will be before the climate on HD189733b becomes a political issue.
If you thought NOAA Has a hard time .... (Score:3)
And j ust so you know, I'm going to drive my SUV no matter what they tell me I might be doing to the weather patterns of some random exoplanet.
Weather forecast (Score:5, Funny)
Not going to be very usefil knowing what its going to be like tomorrow when that was 63 years ago
Notable point in history (Score:3)
Every once in awhile I like to mentally stop and take a look around to see where we are. I think this is a good moment for that.
Notice that we are collecting data on the weather patterns of a planet not in our solar system.
We live in the future.
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No they aren't. They are just doing guesses based on what they think the temperature is at various points of the globe. They can't detect the "winds blowing from the cold to hot side". They are just guessing that they are there because they think there is a temperature differential.
They seem to think this thing is tidally locked, so with the same side always facing the star it's all but guaranteed there's a temperature differential.
Bullshit (Score:2)
We just covered this paper in our class last week (Score:3)
I'm co-teaching a graduate course on exoplanets, and we talked about this paper in one of our meetings last week. Here's the link to our discussion of "spectroscopy of exoplanet atmospheres:"
http://spiff.rit.edu/classes/e... [rit.edu]
You can read all our materials at
http://spiff.rit.edu/classes/e... [rit.edu]
Enjoy!