Gone are the days of being able to count the number of known planets on your
fingers. Today, there are more than 800 confirmed exoplanets -- planets that
orbit stars beyond our sun -- and more than 2,700 other candidates. What are
these exotic planets made of? Unfortunately, you cannot stack them in a jar like
marbles and take a closer look. Instead, researchers are coming up with advanced
techniques for probing the planets' makeup.
One breakthrough to come in recent years is direct imaging of exoplanets.
Ground-based telescopes have begun taking infrared pictures of the planets
posing near their stars in family portraits. But to astronomers, a picture is
worth even more than a thousand words if its light can be broken apart into a
rainbow of different wavelengths.
Those wishes are coming true as researchers are beginning to install infrared
cameras on ground-based telescopes equipped with spectrographs. Spectrographs
are instruments that spread an object's light apart, revealing signatures of
molecules. Project 1640, partly funded by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Pasadena, Calif., recently accomplished this goal using the Palomar Observatory
near San Diego.
"In just one hour, we were able to get precise composition information about
four planets around one overwhelmingly bright star," said Gautam Vasisht of JPL,
co-author of the new study appearing in the Astrophysical Journal. "The star is
a hundred thousand times as bright as the planets, so we've developed ways to
remove that starlight and isolate the extremely faint light of the planets."
Along with ground-based infrared imaging, other strategies for combing
through the atmospheres of giant planets are being actively pursued as well. For
example, NASA's Spitzer and Hubble space telescopes monitor planets as they
cross in front of their stars, and then disappear behind. NASA's upcoming James
Webb Space Telescope will use a comparable strategy to study the atmospheres of
planets only slightly larger than Earth.
In the new study, the researchers examined HR 8799, a large star orbited by
at least four known giant, red planets. Three of the planets were among the
first ever directly imaged around a star, thanks to observations from the Gemini
and Keck telescopes on Mauna Kea, Hawaii, in 2008. The fourth planet, the
closest to the star and the hardest to see, was revealed in images taken by the
Keck telescope in 2010.
That alone was a tremendous feat considering that all planet discoveries up
until then had been made through indirect means, for example by looking for the
wobble of a star induced by the tug of planets.
Those images weren't enough, however, to reveal any information about the
planets' chemical composition. That's where spectrographs are needed -- to
expose the "fingerprints" of molecules in a planet's atmosphere. Capturing a
distant world's spectrum requires gathering even more planet light, and that
means further blocking the glare of the star.
Project 1640 accomplished this with a collection of instruments, which the
team installs on the ground-based telescopes each time they go on "observing
runs." The instrument suite includes a coronagraph to mask out the starlight; an
advanced adaptive optics system, which removes the blur of our moving atmosphere
by making millions of tiny adjustments to two deformable telescope mirrors; an
imaging spectrograph that records 30 images in a rainbow of infrared colors
simultaneously; and a state-of-the-art wave front sensor that further adjusts
the mirrors to compensate for scattered starlight.
"It's like taking a single picture of the Empire State Building from an
airplane that reveals a bump on the sidewalk next to it that is as high as an
ant," said Ben R. Oppenheimer, lead author of the new study and associate
curator and chair of the Astrophysics Department at the American Museum of
Natural History, N.Y., N.Y.
Their results revealed that all four planets, though nearly the same in
temperature, have different compositions. Some, unexpectedly, do not have
methane in them, and there may be hints of ammonia or other compounds that would
also be surprising. Further theoretical modeling will help to understand the
chemistry of these planets.
Meanwhile, the quest to obtain more and better spectra of exoplanets
continues. Other researchers have used the Keck telescope and the Large
Binocular Telescope near Tucson, Ariz., to study the emission of individual
planets in the HR8799 system. In addition to the HR 8799 system, only two others
have yielded images of exoplanets. The next step is to find more planets ripe
for giving up their chemical secrets. Several ground-based telescopes are being
prepared for the hunt, including Keck, Gemini, Palomar and Japan's Subaru
Telescope on Mauna Kea, Hawaii.
Ideally, the researchers want to find young planets that still have enough
heat left over from their formation, and thus more infrared light for the
spectrographs to see. They also want to find planets located far from their
stars, and out of the blinding starlight. NASA's infrared Spitzer and Wide-field
Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) missions, and its ultraviolet Galaxy Evolution
Explorer, now led by the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, have
helped identify candidate young stars that may host planets meeting these
criteria.
"We're looking for super-Jupiter planets located faraway from their star,"
said Vasisht. "As our technique develops, we hope to be able to acquire
molecular compositions of smaller, and slightly older, gas planets."
Still lower-mass planets, down to the size of Saturn, will be targets for
imaging studies by the James Webb Space Telescope.
"Rocky Earth-like planets are too small and close to their stars for the
current technology, or even for James Webb to detect. The feat of cracking the
chemical compositions of true Earth analogs will come from a future space
mission such as the proposed Terrestrial Planet Finder," said Charles Beichman,
a co-author of the P1640 result and executive director of NASA's Exoplanet
Science Institute at Caltech.
Though the larger, gas planets are not hospitable to life, the current
studies are teaching astronomers how the smaller, rocky ones form.
"The outer giant planets dictate the fate of rocky ones like Earth. Giant
planets can migrate in toward a star, and in the process, tug the smaller, rocky
planets around or even kick them out of the system. We're looking at hot
Jupiters before they migrate in, and hope to understand more about how and when
they might influence the destiny of the rocky, inner planets," said Vasisht.
NASA's Exoplanet Science Institute manages time allocation on the Keck
telescope for NASA. JPL manages NASA's Exoplanet Exploration program office.
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