Hot Jupiter

Hot Jupiter

Planets in our own solar system have a wide range of properties. They are distinguished by two basic properties, their size and their orbit. The size determines if the planet can have a life-sustaining atmosphere. The orbit affects the surface temperature and whether there could be liquid water on the planet’s surface.

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Hot Jupiters are a class of gas giant exoplanets that are inferred to be physically similar to Jupiter but that have very short orbital period (P<10 days). The close proximity to their stars and high surface-atmosphere temperatures resulted in the moniker “hot Jupiters”.

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Hot Jupiters are the easiest extrasolar planets to detect via the radial-velocity method, because the oscillations they induce in their parent stars’ motion are relatively large and rapid compared to those of other known types of planets.

Hot Jupiter

One of the best-known hot Jupiters is 51 Pegasi b. Discovered in 1995, it was the first extrasolar planet found orbiting a Sun-like star. 51 Pegasi b has an orbital period of about 4 days.

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There are two general schools of thought regarding the origin of hot Jupiters: formation at a distance followed by inward migration and in-situ formation at the distances at which they’re currently observed. The prevalent view is migration.

Hot Jupiter

Migration 

In the migration hypothesis, a hot Jupiter forms beyond the frost line, from rock, ice, and gases via the core accretion method of planetary formation. The planet then migrates inwards to the star where it eventually forms a stable orbit. The planet may have migrated inwar.

In situ

Instead of being gas giants that migrated inward, in an alternate hypothesis the cores of the hot Jupiters began as more common super-Earths which accreted their gas envelopes at their current locations, becoming gas giants in situ. The super-Earths providing the cores in this hypothesis could have formed either in situ or at greater distances and have undergone migration before acquiring their gas envelopes.

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source

More Posts from Ocrim1967 and Others

4 years ago
Happy Birthday, Albert Einstein! Genius Scientist Turns 140 Years Old Today.
Happy Birthday, Albert Einstein! Genius Scientist Turns 140 Years Old Today.
Happy Birthday, Albert Einstein! Genius Scientist Turns 140 Years Old Today.

Happy Birthday, Albert Einstein! Genius Scientist Turns 140 Years Old Today.

The year 1905 came to be known as Einstein’s Miracle Year. He was 26 years old, and in that year he published four papers that reshaped physics. 

Photoelectric effect

The first explained what’s called the photoelectric effect – one of the bases for modern-day electronics – with practical applications including television. His paper on the photoelectric effect helped pave the way for quantum mechanics by establishing that light is both a particle and a wave. For this work, Einstein was later awarded a Nobel Prize in physics.

Happy Birthday, Albert Einstein! Genius Scientist Turns 140 Years Old Today.
Happy Birthday, Albert Einstein! Genius Scientist Turns 140 Years Old Today.

Brownian motion 

Another 1905 paper related to Brownian motion. In it, Einstein stated that the seemingly random motion of particles in a fluid (Brownian motion) was a predictable, measurable part of the movement of atoms and molecules. This helped establish the Kinetic Molecular Theory of Heat, which says that, if you heat something, its molecules begin to vibrate. At this same time, Einstein provided definitive confirmation that atoms and molecules actually exist.

Happy Birthday, Albert Einstein! Genius Scientist Turns 140 Years Old Today.
Happy Birthday, Albert Einstein! Genius Scientist Turns 140 Years Old Today.

Special relativity

Also in 1905, Einstein published his Special Theory of Relativity. Before it, space, time and mass all seemed to be absolutes – the same for everyone. Einstein showed that different people perceive mass, space and time differently, but that these effects don’t show up until you start moving nearly at the speed of light. Then you find, for example, that time on a swiftly moving spaceship slows down, while the mass of the ship increases. According to Einstein, a spaceship traveling at the speed of light would have infinite mass, and a body of infinite mass also has infinite resistance to motion. And that’s why nothing can accelerate to a speed faster than light speed. Because of Einstein’s special relativity, light is now seen as an absolute in a universe of shifting values for space, time and matter.

Happy Birthday, Albert Einstein! Genius Scientist Turns 140 Years Old Today.

Mass-energy equivalence

The fourth 1905 paper stated that mass and energy are equivalent. You perhaps know something of this work in Einstein’s famous equation E=mc2. That equation means that energy (E) is equal to mass (m) multiplied by the speed of light © squared. Sound simple? It is, in a way. It means that matter and energy are the same thing. It’s also very profound, in part because the speed of light is a huge number. As shown by the equation, a small amount of mass can be converted into a large amount of energy … as in atomic bombs. It’s this same conversion of mass to energy, by the way, that causes stars to shine.

But Einstein didn’t stop there. As early as 1911, he’d predicted that light passing near a large mass, such as a star, would be bent. That idea led to his General Theory of Relativity in 1916.

Happy Birthday, Albert Einstein! Genius Scientist Turns 140 Years Old Today.
Happy Birthday, Albert Einstein! Genius Scientist Turns 140 Years Old Today.

This paper established the modern theory of gravitation and gave us the notion of curved space. Einstein showed, for example, that small masses such as planets form dimples in space-time that hardly affect the path of starlight. But big masses such as stars produce measurably curved space.

Happy Birthday, Albert Einstein! Genius Scientist Turns 140 Years Old Today.
Happy Birthday, Albert Einstein! Genius Scientist Turns 140 Years Old Today.
Happy Birthday, Albert Einstein! Genius Scientist Turns 140 Years Old Today.
Happy Birthday, Albert Einstein! Genius Scientist Turns 140 Years Old Today.
Happy Birthday, Albert Einstein! Genius Scientist Turns 140 Years Old Today.

The fact that the curved space around our sun was measurable let other scientists prove Einstein’s theory. In 1919, two expeditions organized by Arthur Eddington photographed stars near the sun made visible during a solar eclipse. The displacement of these stars with respect to their true positions on the celestial sphere showed that the sun’s gravity does cause space to curve so that starlight traveling near the sun is bent from its original path. This observation confirmed Einstein’s theory, and made Einstein a household name. 

Happy Birthday, Albert Einstein! Genius Scientist Turns 140 Years Old Today.

Source (read more) posts about Einstein

6 years ago
Couple Goals
Couple Goals
Couple Goals
Couple Goals

Couple goals

5 years ago
Ask Ethan: Where Is The Center Of The Universe?
Ask Ethan: Where Is The Center Of The Universe?
Ask Ethan: Where Is The Center Of The Universe?
Ask Ethan: Where Is The Center Of The Universe?
Ask Ethan: Where Is The Center Of The Universe?
Ask Ethan: Where Is The Center Of The Universe?
Ask Ethan: Where Is The Center Of The Universe?
Ask Ethan: Where Is The Center Of The Universe?
Ask Ethan: Where Is The Center Of The Universe?
Ask Ethan: Where Is The Center Of The Universe?

Ask Ethan: Where Is The Center Of The Universe?

“I am wondering how there isn’t a center of the universe and how the cosmic background radiation is [equally] far away everywhere we look. It seems to me that when the universe expands… there should be a place where it started expanding.”

Ah, the old center of the Universe question. If the Big Bang happened a long time ago, and we see galaxies moving away from us faster and faster the farther away they are, then where did the Big Bang happen? Where did the expansion start?

It seems like such a simple question, but it turns out this is the wrong question to be asking. The way space and the expanding Universe works is very different from the picture most of us have in our heads, which is much more like an explosion than like an expansion. Yet there’s a very large suite of evidence that points us away from an explosion.

Instead of asking *where* the Big Bang occurred, we should be asking *when* the Big Bang occurred. It makes a lot more sense when you think about it in those terms. Come and find out why.

6 years ago

Black holes

A black hole is a region of spacetime exhibiting such strong gravitational effects that nothing—not even particles and electromagnetic radiation such as light—can escape from inside it. The theory of general relativity predicts that a sufficiently compact mass can deform spacetime to form a black hole. The boundary of the region from which no escape is possible is called the event horizon. Although the event horizon has an enormous effect on the fate and circumstances of an object crossing it, no locally detectable features appear to be observed. In many ways a black hole acts like an ideal black body, as it reflects no light.  

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The idea of a body so massive that even light could not escape was briefly proposed by astronomical pioneer and English clergyman John Michell in a letter published in November 1784. Michell’s simplistic calculations assumed that such a body might have the same density as the Sun, and concluded that such a body would form when a star’s diameter exceeds the Sun’s by a factor of 500, and the surface escape velocity exceeds the usual speed of light.

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At the center of a black hole, as described by general relativity, lies a gravitational singularity, a region where the spacetime curvature becomes infinite. For a non-rotating black hole, this region takes the shape of a single point and for a rotating black hole, it is smeared out to form a ring singularity that lies in the plane of rotation. In both cases, the singular region has zero volume. It can also be shown that the singular region contains all the mass of the black hole solution. The singular region can thus be thought of as having infinite density. 

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How Do Black Holes Form?

Scientists think the smallest black holes formed when the universe began.

Stellar black holes are made when the center of a very big star falls in upon itself, or collapses. When this happens, it causes a supernova. A supernova is an exploding star that blasts part of the star into space.

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Scientists think supermassive black holes were made at the same time as the galaxy they are in.

Supermassive black holes, which can have a mass equivalent to billions of suns, likely exist in the centers of most galaxies, including our own galaxy, the Milky Way. We don’t know exactly how supermassive black holes form, but it’s likely that they’re a byproduct of galaxy formation. Because of their location in the centers of galaxies, close to many tightly packed stars and gas clouds, supermassive black holes continue to grow on a steady diet of matter.

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If Black Holes Are “Black,” How Do Scientists Know They Are There?

A black hole can not be seen because strong gravity pulls all of the light into the middle of the black hole. But scientists can see how the strong gravity affects the stars and gas around the black hole. 

Scientists can study stars to find out if they are flying around, or orbiting, a black hole.

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When a black hole and a star are close together, high-energy light is made. This kind of light can not be seen with human eyes. Scientists use satellites and telescopes in space to see the high-energy light.

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On 11 February 2016, the LIGO collaboration announced the first observation of gravitational waves; because these waves were generated from a black hole merger it was the first ever direct detection of a binary black hole merger. On 15 June 2016, a second detection of a gravitational wave event from colliding black holes was announced. 

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Simulation of gravitational lensing by a black hole, which distorts the image of a galaxy in the background 

Animated simulation of gravitational lensing caused by a black hole going past a background galaxy. A secondary image of the galaxy can be seen within the black hole Einstein ring on the opposite direction of that of the galaxy. The secondary image grows (remaining within the Einstein ring) as the primary image approaches the black hole. The surface brightness of the two images remains constant, but their angular size varies, hence producing an amplification of the galaxy luminosity as seen from a distant observer. The maximum amplification occurs when the background galaxy (or in the present case a bright part of it) is exactly behind the black hole.

Could a Black Hole Destroy Earth?

Black holes do not go around in space eating stars, moons and planets. Earth will not fall into a black hole because no black hole is close enough to the solar system for Earth to do that.

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Even if a black hole the same mass as the sun were to take the place of the sun, Earth still would not fall in. The black hole would have the same gravity as the sun. Earth and the other planets would orbit the black hole as they orbit the sun now.

The sun will never turn into a black hole. The sun is not a big enough star to make a black hole.

More posts about black holes

Source 1, 2 & 3

5 years ago
Not Only Didn’t We Find Water On An Earth-Like Exoplanet, But We Can’t With Current Technology
Not Only Didn’t We Find Water On An Earth-Like Exoplanet, But We Can’t With Current Technology
Not Only Didn’t We Find Water On An Earth-Like Exoplanet, But We Can’t With Current Technology
Not Only Didn’t We Find Water On An Earth-Like Exoplanet, But We Can’t With Current Technology
Not Only Didn’t We Find Water On An Earth-Like Exoplanet, But We Can’t With Current Technology
Not Only Didn’t We Find Water On An Earth-Like Exoplanet, But We Can’t With Current Technology
Not Only Didn’t We Find Water On An Earth-Like Exoplanet, But We Can’t With Current Technology
Not Only Didn’t We Find Water On An Earth-Like Exoplanet, But We Can’t With Current Technology
Not Only Didn’t We Find Water On An Earth-Like Exoplanet, But We Can’t With Current Technology
Not Only Didn’t We Find Water On An Earth-Like Exoplanet, But We Can’t With Current Technology

Not Only Didn’t We Find Water On An Earth-Like Exoplanet, But We Can’t With Current Technology

“Over the past few decades, astronomers have uncovered thousands of new exoplanets. Some of them are rocky; some are temperate; some have water. However, the idea that exoplanet K2-18b is rocky, Earth-like, and has liquid water is absurd, despite recent headlines. Light filters through K2-18b’s atmosphere when it passes in front of its star, enabling us to measure what’s absorbed. Based on those absorption lines, the presence of many chemicals can be inferred, including water. K2-18b is, truly, the first known habitable-zone exoplanet to contain water. However, it is not rocky; its mass and radius are too large, necessitating a large gas envelope around it.”

How incredible was that report that came out last week: the first Earth-like, rocky exoplanet with liquid water on its surface has been discovered! If it were true, it would be incredible. Well, what we did find is still pretty remarkable, but it’s very different from what you’ve likely heard.

We did find water on the exoplanet in question, K2-18b, but only in the vapor phase and only in the atmosphere.

The exoplanet is closer to Earth in terms of mass and radius than any other with water on it, but the planet is still too massive and large to be rocky. It must have an envelope of hydrogen and helium, and both have had their presence detected.

If we want to find atmospheric biosignatures around Earth-like worlds, we need better observatories. Let’s build them! Here’s the real story.

6 years ago
In October 1980 The Voyager Probe Discovered Three Small Moons Of Saturn, Pandora, Atlas And Prometheus.
In October 1980 The Voyager Probe Discovered Three Small Moons Of Saturn, Pandora, Atlas And Prometheus.
In October 1980 The Voyager Probe Discovered Three Small Moons Of Saturn, Pandora, Atlas And Prometheus.
In October 1980 The Voyager Probe Discovered Three Small Moons Of Saturn, Pandora, Atlas And Prometheus.
In October 1980 The Voyager Probe Discovered Three Small Moons Of Saturn, Pandora, Atlas And Prometheus.
In October 1980 The Voyager Probe Discovered Three Small Moons Of Saturn, Pandora, Atlas And Prometheus.
In October 1980 The Voyager Probe Discovered Three Small Moons Of Saturn, Pandora, Atlas And Prometheus.
In October 1980 The Voyager Probe Discovered Three Small Moons Of Saturn, Pandora, Atlas And Prometheus.
In October 1980 The Voyager Probe Discovered Three Small Moons Of Saturn, Pandora, Atlas And Prometheus.
In October 1980 The Voyager Probe Discovered Three Small Moons Of Saturn, Pandora, Atlas And Prometheus.

In October 1980 the Voyager probe discovered three small moons of Saturn, Pandora, Atlas and Prometheus. (source & images)

6 years ago
The Heliosphere Is The Bubble-like Region Of Space Dominated By The Sun, Which Extends Far Beyond The
The Heliosphere Is The Bubble-like Region Of Space Dominated By The Sun, Which Extends Far Beyond The
The Heliosphere Is The Bubble-like Region Of Space Dominated By The Sun, Which Extends Far Beyond The
The Heliosphere Is The Bubble-like Region Of Space Dominated By The Sun, Which Extends Far Beyond The

The heliosphere is the bubble-like region of space dominated by the Sun, which extends far beyond the orbit of Pluto. Plasma “blown” out from the Sun, known as the solar wind, creates and maintains this bubble against the outside pressure of the interstellar medium, the hydrogen and helium gas that permeates the Milky Way Galaxy. The solar wind flows outward from the Sun until encountering the termination shock, where motion slows abruptly. The Voyager spacecraft have explored the outer reaches of the heliosphere, passing through the shock and entering the heliosheath, a transitional region which is in turn bounded by the outermost edge of the heliosphere, called the heliopause. The shape of the heliosphere is controlled by the interstellar medium through which it is traveling, as well as the Sun and is not perfectly spherical. The limited data available and unexplored nature of these structures have resulted in many theories. The word “heliosphere” is said to have been coined by Alexander J. Dessler, who is credited with first use of the word in the scientific literature.

On September 12, 2013, NASA announced that Voyager 1 left the heliopause on August 25, 2012, when it measured a sudden increase in plasma density of about forty times. Because the heliopause marks one boundary between the Sun’s solar wind and the rest of the galaxy, a spacecraft such as Voyager 1 which has departed the heliosphere, can be said to have reached interstellar space. source

6 years ago
image

The year is 1965, and thanks to telecommunication engineers at our Jet Propulsions Laboratory, the first color version of one of our first Martian images had been created. Brought to life by hand coloring numbered strips, this image is a true blast to the past.

Fast forward to the 21st century and our Mars InSight mission now enables us to gawk at the Martian horizon as if we were there. InSight captured this panorama of its landing site on Dec. 9, 2018, the 14th Martian day, or sol, of its mission. The 290-degree perspective surveys the rim of the degraded crater InSight landed in and was made up of 30 photos stitched together.

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.

6 years ago

How Big is Our Galaxy, the Milky Way?

When we talk about the enormity of the cosmos, it’s easy to toss out big numbers – but far harder to wrap our minds around just how large, how far and how numerous celestial bodies like exoplanets – planets beyond our solar system – really are.

So. How big is our Milky Way Galaxy?

We use light-time to measure the vast distances of space.

It’s the distance that light travels in a specific period of time. Also: LIGHT IS FAST, nothing travels faster than light.

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How far can light travel in one second? 186,000 miles. It might look even faster in metric: 300,000 kilometers in one second. See? FAST.

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How far can light travel in one minute? 11,160,000 miles. We’re moving now! Light could go around the Earth a bit more than 448 times in one minute.

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Speaking of Earth, how long does it take light from the Sun to reach our planet? 8.3 minutes. (It takes 43.2 minutes for sunlight to reach Jupiter, about 484 million miles away.) Light is fast, but the distances are VAST.

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In an hour, light can travel 671 million miles. We’re still light-years from the nearest exoplanet, by the way. Proxima Centauri b is 4.2 light-years away. So… how far is a light-year? 5.8 TRILLION MILES.

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A trip at light speed to the very edge of our solar system – the farthest reaches of the Oort Cloud, a collection of dormant comets way, WAY out there – would take about 1.87 years.

Our galaxy contains 100 to 400 billion stars and is about 100,000 light-years across!

One of the most distant exoplanets known to us in the Milky Way is Kepler-443b. Traveling at light speed, it would take 3,000 years to get there. Or 28 billion years, going 60 mph. So, you know, far.

SPACE IS BIG.

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Read more here: go.nasa.gov/2FTyhgH

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.

6 years ago
5 Things We Still Don’t Know About Black Holes (And 2 We Do) After LIGO
5 Things We Still Don’t Know About Black Holes (And 2 We Do) After LIGO
5 Things We Still Don’t Know About Black Holes (And 2 We Do) After LIGO
5 Things We Still Don’t Know About Black Holes (And 2 We Do) After LIGO
5 Things We Still Don’t Know About Black Holes (And 2 We Do) After LIGO
5 Things We Still Don’t Know About Black Holes (And 2 We Do) After LIGO
5 Things We Still Don’t Know About Black Holes (And 2 We Do) After LIGO
5 Things We Still Don’t Know About Black Holes (And 2 We Do) After LIGO
5 Things We Still Don’t Know About Black Holes (And 2 We Do) After LIGO
5 Things We Still Don’t Know About Black Holes (And 2 We Do) After LIGO

5 Things We Still Don’t Know About Black Holes (And 2 We Do) After LIGO

“1.) How small are the lowest-mass black holes?

LIGO has yet to detect any low-amplitude binaries, providing no information about this population.”

Beginning in 2015, the LIGO detectors began to see robust, bona fide signals of gravitational waves. Of the 11 signals detected to date, 10 of them correspond to black hole-black hole mergers. Gravitational wave astronomy has not only opened up a whole new eye on the Universe, it’s opened up a whole new world as far as our understanding of black holes go. With these 10 mergers under our belt, and an upgraded data run expected later this year, it’s time to take stock of what we don’t yet know, and how we hope to get there. 

Here’s where we are today in our understanding of LIGO’s black holes.

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