for anyone that wants to participate in exoplanet hunting, and wants to use transit method, you can register here and start looking
https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/nora-dot-eisner/planet-hunters-tess
already found these 2 potential planets potently lurking around TIC 115072732
(the 2 outer planets are from planet C and the 2 inner ones are from planet)
unconfirmed planet b orbit is ~10 days
unconfirmed planet c orbit is ~23 days
going off of that, these are the orbits of those 2 unconfirmed exoworlds i got
quite fun looking for these things
Zooniverse, Planet Hunters TESS
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Topic authortrappistplanets
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Zooniverse, Planet Hunters TESS
There is a limit to how far we can travel into the stars.
Owner of "The Grand Voyage" addon series
Collaborating with Dangerous_safety for the still developing Cer system
Owner of "The Grand Voyage" addon series
Collaborating with Dangerous_safety for the still developing Cer system
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Topic authortrappistplanets
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this was a false +, bummertrappistplanets wrote:already found these 2 potential planets potently lurking around TIC 115072732
Added after 20 seconds:
may turn these into fictional planets
There is a limit to how far we can travel into the stars.
Owner of "The Grand Voyage" addon series
Collaborating with Dangerous_safety for the still developing Cer system
Owner of "The Grand Voyage" addon series
Collaborating with Dangerous_safety for the still developing Cer system
- SevenSpheres
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"It's a 1-in-36-million chance, but it just might work"
Relevant new paper: A SuperWASP Light Curve Displaying a Single Long-duration Transit: A Jupiter Size Exoplanet in a Very Distant Orbit?
This candidate was found by Zooniverse volunteers (including trappistplanets) on a different project, SuperWASP: Black Hole Hunters (discussion thread). It could potentially be a large planet or brown dwarf in a very wide orbit (~205 AU, ~2240 years) around the star, which would make it the longest-period transiting planet known. The chance of detecting such a transit is about 1 in 36 million! Another possibility not discussed in the paper is that of a free-floating object that passed in front of a background star (which has been suggested for the similar candidate J1407b).
SSC code assuming a star-orbiting object:
Update 2022-06-22: The apparent transit turns out to be an artifact. There isn't a planet here.
This candidate was found by Zooniverse volunteers (including trappistplanets) on a different project, SuperWASP: Black Hole Hunters (discussion thread). It could potentially be a large planet or brown dwarf in a very wide orbit (~205 AU, ~2240 years) around the star, which would make it the longest-period transiting planet known. The chance of detecting such a transit is about 1 in 36 million! Another possibility not discussed in the paper is that of a free-floating object that passed in front of a background star (which has been suggested for the similar candidate J1407b).
SSC code assuming a star-orbiting object:
Code: Select all
"1SWASP J182438.34+302546.0 b:b:(unconfirmed)" "TYC 2623-1439-1"
{
Class "planet"
Texture "browndwarf.*" # assuming a young object
Emissive true
Color [ 1 0.5 0.5 ]
Radius 128686
EllipticalOrbit {
Epoch 2453197.9
Period 2240
SemiMajorAxis 205
Inclination 87.55
AscendingNode 275.65
ArgOfPericenter 143.75 # apparently needed for transit time to work??
MeanAnomaly 90
}
UniformRotation {
Period 10 # guess
Inclination 87.55
AscendingNode 275.65
}
InfoURL "https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/2515-5172/ac6811"
}
Update 2022-06-22: The apparent transit turns out to be an artifact. There isn't a planet here.
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Celestia versions: 1.5.1, 1.6.1, 1.6.2, 1.7.0, and some unofficial versions like Celestia-ED
Celestia versions: 1.5.1, 1.6.1, 1.6.2, 1.7.0, and some unofficial versions like Celestia-ED
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Topic authortrappistplanets
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thing has sutch a long period its near impossible with current tech to prove this planet, because it will take another ~2240 years for us to see the transit againSevenSpheres wrote:This candidate was found by Zooniverse volunteers (including trappistplanets) on a different project, SuperWASP: Black Hole Hunters (discussion thread). It could potentially be a large planet or brown dwarf in a very wide orbit (~205 AU, ~2240 years) around the star, which would make it the longest-period transiting planet known. The chance of detecting such a transit is about 1 in 36 million! Another possibility not discussed in the paper is that of a free-floating object that passed in front of a background star (which has been suggested for the similar candidate J1407b).
There is a limit to how far we can travel into the stars.
Owner of "The Grand Voyage" addon series
Collaborating with Dangerous_safety for the still developing Cer system
Owner of "The Grand Voyage" addon series
Collaborating with Dangerous_safety for the still developing Cer system