Sunday, September 2, 2012
Tatooine-Prime is not alone: binary planets around binary suns
The University of Hawai`i managed to write about the
discovery of planets around a binary star system without once mentioning the
iconic planet, Tatooine.
Partly, that might be because there is far more about the
new discovery than just the fact that a planet exists around two stars spinning
in their own tight orbit. In this case, two planets (maybe three) around the two stars.
(Image, an artist’s view of a planet like Tatooine, with its
twin suns spinning in the distance. This system, spotted through the Kepler spacecraft,
is called Kepler-47. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/T. Pyle)
Tatooine, of course, is the desert planet in the Star Wars
film series, which is the home planet to both Anakin and Luke Skywalker. In
many of its scenes, Tatooine’s twin suns are displayed above the horizon.
University of Hawai`i astronomer Nader Haghighipour was part
of a team that discovered what they called Kepler-47, naming it after the
Kepler space observatory, which was launched in 2009. The funding for the team’s work came from NASA
and the National Science Foundation.
The team announced the finding at the triennial International
Astronomical Union meeting in Beijing, and published it in Science—under the
daunting title: “Kepler-47: A Transiting Circumbinary Multiplanet System.” The abstract is here.
What’s cool about this?
Binary star systems are cool, although this is not the first
one that’s been found.
That this binary star system has a complement of planets is
cool—first time that’s been seen. It proves that it’s possible for a solar
system to exist around twin suns. The stars of Kepler-47 orbit each other roughly
weekly—every 7.5 days.
And ultimate cool for science fiction fans and astronomers
is one of the planets is within the stars’ habitable zone, meaning liquid water
could exist on their surfaces. The question still unanswered is whether this
planet even has a surface on which to have liquid water. It could be a gas
giant like Jupiter—but maybe not.
The inner planet is smaller, three times Earth’s radius, and
spins a full orbit around its suns in 49 days. The other—the one in the
habitable zone—is Jupiter-sized at 4.6 times Earth’s radius and orbits every
303 days—not far from Earth’s 365.
And there may be a third planet, although the evidence isn’t
yet strong enough to say for sure.
Here is the University of Hawai`i Institute for Astronomyrelease, with links and images.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2012
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