Planets Around Other Stars
What are exoplanets?
      Throughout recorded history and perhaps before, we have wondered 
about the possible existence of other worlds, like or unlike our own. 
The earliest understanding of the solar system showed us that there were
 indeed other worlds in orbit about our Sun, and steadily growing 
understanding of their natures shows that all are dramatically different
 from Earth, and mostly very different from one another. As we came to 
understand that the stars in the sky are other suns, and that the 
galaxies consist of billions of stars, it appeared a near certainty that
 other planets must orbit other stars. And yet, it could not be proven, 
until the early 1990’s. Then, radio and optical astronomers detected 
small changes in stellar emission which revealed the presence of first a
 few, and now many, planetary systems around other stars. We call these 
planets “exoplanets” to distinguish them from our own solar system 
neighbors.
    
How we know that there are planets around other stars?
      Most of the detected exoplanets have revealed their presence by 
small effects that they have on their star. As planet follows its 
orbital path, the star follows a complementary motion of its own. This 
is a tiny effect proportional to the planet/star mass ratio – in the 
case of the solar system, the Sun moves in synch with the Earth at the 
speed of a slow dance – currently too slow to readily detect in a 
distant system. The motion of the Sun in synch with Jupiter, however, is
 closer to a fast run – and in favorable cases it can be detected by 
several methods. The motion of the host star can be measured as a shift 
in its spectrum (the Doppler shift) or as a change in its position on 
the sky (astrometry).
 In both cases these are very challenging measurements and require 
exquisitely sensitive instruments. Exoplanet orbits presumably have 
random orientations, and in some cases the orbit carries the planet 
between us and its star. Then the exoplanet might be detected by the 
decrease in the light from the star. Such transits have been observed, and a number of planets discovered by this method.
Another effect that can reveal the presence of a planet around another star is the bending of light from background stars by the gravitational field of an intervening star. If the intervening star has an orbiting planet it may alter the gravitational lensing effect in a noticeable way (microlensing). The large majority of the several hundred known extrasolar planets have been discovered by the Doppler technique, and other methods are contributing more significantly as they are refined and the number of detected exoplanets continues to increase steadily.
Another effect that can reveal the presence of a planet around another star is the bending of light from background stars by the gravitational field of an intervening star. If the intervening star has an orbiting planet it may alter the gravitational lensing effect in a noticeable way (microlensing). The large majority of the several hundred known extrasolar planets have been discovered by the Doppler technique, and other methods are contributing more significantly as they are refined and the number of detected exoplanets continues to increase steadily.
What do we know about our exoplanet neighbors?
      Although the details are not entirely understood, it is known that
 stars like the Sun form from spinning protostellar disks of gas and 
dust. The Earth and other planets of the solar system are believed to 
have developed from the remains of that disk, and there is no reason to 
believe that the same process would not be effective throughout the 
galaxy. Thus a first guess might be that other planetary systems would 
be like the solar system.
    
      However, the first detections of exoplanets revealed bodies which 
are utterly unlike any solar system planet – and subsequent discoveries 
have shown that many exoplanet systems are very dissimilar from ours. In
 some exosystems, planets as massive as Jupiter orbit so close to their 
star that they are heated to high temperature and their upper 
atmospheres are swept into space. In other systems, planets follow 
elongated orbits (in contrast to the nearly circular orbits of the solar
 system). However, our studies of exoplanets are just beginning, and it 
is not possible to be sure what will prove to be “typical” planets among
 our neighboring stars. Will most planet systems prove to be much like 
our own, or are we exceptional in more ways than we can imagine? Only 
years of further study will tell.
Some slim evidence is accumulating that exoplanet systems which resemble the solar system will be found. A recent discovery has shown that the star 55 Cancri, 41 light years away, has a system of 5 planets, with distributions somewhat similar to the solar systems inner planets (though with much higher masses). As our measurements become sensitive to lower masses, some astronomers believe that we will find many such systems with a substantial complement of planets (perhaps even dynamically full – that is, containing as many planets as can coexist in orbital harmony).
In other reports, a number of planets with masses near that of Earth have been detected. The results are few, but because the measurements are very difficult, the detections are considered significant and possibly indicative of many more to be found in the future. Again, only years of study will tell.
Some slim evidence is accumulating that exoplanet systems which resemble the solar system will be found. A recent discovery has shown that the star 55 Cancri, 41 light years away, has a system of 5 planets, with distributions somewhat similar to the solar systems inner planets (though with much higher masses). As our measurements become sensitive to lower masses, some astronomers believe that we will find many such systems with a substantial complement of planets (perhaps even dynamically full – that is, containing as many planets as can coexist in orbital harmony).
In other reports, a number of planets with masses near that of Earth have been detected. The results are few, but because the measurements are very difficult, the detections are considered significant and possibly indicative of many more to be found in the future. Again, only years of study will tell.
What do we want to learn about exoplanets?
      A thorough understanding of exoplanets will tell us much about how
 our solar system formed, why it has small, rocky planets near the Sun, 
why it has gas giant planets far from the Sun, why the Earth has the 
conditions and chemicals that can support life, and why conditions on 
other planets are hostile to life. Theories of planet formation and 
evolution are incomplete, but offer specific predictions. Detections of 
exoplanets are already testing, validating, and in some cases 
invalidating, details of these theories.
    
      Perhaps the most interesting question, and one of the most 
difficult to answer, concerns the uniqueness of the Earth. Are there 
planets similar to the Earth around other stars and does life exist on 
any other planet beyond our own Earth?
    
 
 
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