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09 July 2004
Texas Astronomers
Find & Confirm Extrasolar Planet in Record Time with Hobby-Eberly
Telescope
AUSTIN McDonald Observatory astronomers Bill Cochran,
Michael Endl, and Barbara McArthur have exploited the Hobby-Eberly
Telescopes (HETs) capabilities to rapidly find
and confirm, with great precision, the giant telescopes
first planet outside our solar system. The event serves as
proof-of-concept that HET, combined with its High Resolution
Spectrograph instrument, is on track to become a major player
in the hunt for other worlds. The research has been accepted
for publication in an upcoming edition of Astrophysical
Journal Letters.
With a mass 2.84 times that of Jupiter, the newly discovered
planet orbits the star HD 37605 every 54.23 days. HD 37605
is a little smaller and little cooler than the Sun. The star,
which is of a type called "K0" or "K-zero,"
is rich in heavy chemical elements compared to the Sun.
Of the approximately 120 extrasolar planets found to date,
this new planet has the third most eccentric orbit
bringing it in close in to its parent star like a "hot
Jupiter," and swinging it back out. The planets
average distance from its star is 0.26 Astronomical Units
(AU). One AU is the Earth-Sun distance.
The team used the "radial velocity" technique,
a common planet-search method, to find the planet. By measuring
changes in the stars velocity toward and away from Earth
its wobble they deduced that HD 37605 is orbiting
the center of mass of a star-planet system.
"In 100 days of observations less than two full
orbits we were able to get a very good solution for
this planets orbit," Cochran said. The quick results
were due to HETs "queue scheduling" system.
Astronomers do not travel to the observatory to operate the
telescope themselves. Rather, a telescope operator at McDonald
Observatory has a list of all HET research projects and selects
the ones best suited to any given nights weather conditions
and Moon phase. This way, many targets for different research
projects can be observed each night, and any particular target
can be observed dozens of night in a row. According to Cochran,
"queue scheduling is the ideal way to do planet searching.
If the HET had a normal scheduling system, it would have taken
us a year or two to confirm this planet."
Endl added that "with the queue scheduling mode, we
can put every candidate star BACK into the queue at a high
priority to secure follow-up telescope observations immediately."
Cochran added that the high precision of the teams
radial velocity measurements "proves that the HET and
the High Resolution Spectrograph have met their design specs."
He explained that the total error (called "root-mean-square
deviation") in the teams velocity measurements
was 3 meters per second state of the art for planet
searching. Many of the teams measurements had even lower
errors. The High Resolution Spectrograph that made this research
possible was built by Phillip MacQueen, Robert Tull, and John
Good of The University of Texas at Austin.
The Hobby-Eberly Telescope is a joint project of The University
of Texas at Austin, The Pennsylvania State University (Penn
State), Stanford University, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität
München, and Georg-August-Unversität Göttingen.
This planet detection research is supported by the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration.
END
Note to Editors: Further
information on this discovery is available online here.
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