17 exoplanet discoveries were announced today!
[link]http://www.obspm.fr/encycl/encycl.html[/link]
4 from the Anglo-Australian Telescope, 13 from the Marcy and Butler's team. One of them has an approximately Jupiter-like orbit; another has an M sin i of only 30 Earth masses. This is very cool news! I'll update extrasolar.ssc with the new discoveries as soon as I get home from work unless someone else beats me to it
--Chris
Exoplanet discoveries
Code: Select all
"d" "HD 75732" #55 Cnc
{
Texture "jupiterlike.jpg"
Mass 1600
Radius 70000
# orbital data
EllipticalOrbit {
Period 14.52
SemiMajorAxis 6.01
Eccentricity 0.16
}
RotationPeriod 10.0
}
This is my rendering of the Jupiter-like planet, although i've probably made a mistake somewhere...
"I have been asked, 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able to rightly apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question."
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Topic authorchris
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Here is extrasolar.ssc updated with the new planets:
http://www.shatters.net/celestia/files/extrasolar.ssc
I'll put a link to this on the main Celestia page tomorrow. Enjoy!
--Chris
http://www.shatters.net/celestia/files/extrasolar.ssc
I'll put a link to this on the main Celestia page tomorrow. Enjoy!
--Chris
I was going to post on this same subject.
This new "Jupiter-like" planet is supposed to be about 5X the size of our own Jupiter. Don't I remember from school someone saying that if Jupiter had been a bit larger, it could have been a "minor" star?
Does anyone know the limit on gas giants before the fusion process starts?
Just curious.
Ron A (at work)
This new "Jupiter-like" planet is supposed to be about 5X the size of our own Jupiter. Don't I remember from school someone saying that if Jupiter had been a bit larger, it could have been a "minor" star?
Does anyone know the limit on gas giants before the fusion process starts?
Just curious.
Ron A (at work)
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Topic authorchris
- Site Admin
- Posts: 4211
- Joined: 28.01.2002
- With us: 22 years 9 months
- Location: Seattle, Washington, USA
guest wrote:I was going to post on this same subject.
This new "Jupiter-like" planet is supposed to be about 5X the size of our own Jupiter. Don't I remember from school someone saying that if Jupiter had been a bit larger, it could have been a "minor" star?
Does anyone know the limit on gas giants before the fusion process starts?
Just curious.
Ron A (at work)
At around 13 Jupiter masses, a body is massive enough for deuterium fusion to occur. This is generally accepted as the planet - brown dwarf boundary. At 80 Jupiter masses, temperatures become high enough that normal hydrogen fusion takes place and you've got a red dwarf star.
--Chris
Auto- update ?
I just heard that news on tv (about the jupiter like planet) - I just wanted
to examine the it?s mother star and -- the planet is there !!!
I downloaded cel a few month ago - and loaded no updates - i there an
auto-update working - here ?
to examine the it?s mother star and -- the planet is there !!!
I downloaded cel a few month ago - and loaded no updates - i there an
auto-update working - here ?
Unimatrix 11 wrote:I just heard that news on tv (about the jupiter like planet) - I just wanted
to examine the it?s mother star and -- the planet is there !!!
I downloaded cel a few month ago - and loaded no updates - i there an
auto-update working - here ?
no chris has esp lol
I see that I will be doing up 55 Cnc this week
I'm trying to teach the cavemen how to play scrabble, its uphill work. The only word they know is Uhh and they dont know how to spell it!
We've known about the 55 Cancri system for awhile -- this week's news was that the group at JPL announcing that they thought it was an extremely good candidate for having Earthlike planets.
Some Celestia exploration shows something quite interesting: if there were an Earthlike planet at ~1 AU in that system, you could look up at the sun and actually see partial eclipses of it by the innermost gas giant. Wild.
Some Celestia exploration shows something quite interesting: if there were an Earthlike planet at ~1 AU in that system, you could look up at the sun and actually see partial eclipses of it by the innermost gas giant. Wild.