The Solar System
Interplanetary Matter, the Birth
  of the Planets and Exoplanets
                  Chapter 4
 Reading assignment: Chapter 4
             The structure of the Solar System
Planets, satellites (moons),
dwarf planets, asteroids,
comets are part of the solar
system
The Asteroid belt, the Kuiper
belt and the Oort cloud are
also part of the structure of the
solar system
Kuiper belt
• A region of the solar system
located between 30-50 AU
from the Sun
• Bodies in the Kuiper belt are
composed of “ices”, mainly
methane, ammonia and water
ices.
• Pluto, Eris, Makemake and
Haumea are examples of
Kuiper belt objects
            The structure of the inner Solar System
Ceres (Diameter ~ 940
km) and Vesta
(Diameter ~ 500 km)
are the largest bodies in
the Asteroid belt.
Ceres has been
reclassified as a dwarf
planet.
The conditions
established by the
International
Astronomical Union
(IAU) to classify a
body as a planet are:
 It must clear its
orbit of small bodies
 It has a large mass
that collapsed into a
spherical shape
                                          Comets
 Astronomer Fred Whipple named them “Dirty snowballs” – they are composed
of dust and rock in methane, ammonia and water ices
  The light we received from a comet comes from two sources: reflected light from the Sun and
  light emitted from the gas released by the comet, being ionized and excited by UV emission
  from the Sun.
 Parts of a comet:
 • Nucleus
 • Coma
 • Hydrogen envelope
 • Ion (or gas) and dust tails
 • The nucleus is the solid part of the
 comet. The size of the nucleus is
 just a few km in diameter.
 Its diameter too small to be
 resolved with telescopes; its is
 beyond the resolution of a
 telescope
 • The nucleus has been imaged by
 spacecraft only                                      Halley’s Comet in 1986
 •The coma can measure up to
 100,000 km in diameter
The highly eccentric elliptical orbits of most comet take them far beyond the orbit of Pluto
• Long period comets take up to 1 million years to orbit the Sun!
             • These comets originate in the Oort cloud.
The orientation of their orbits are random respect to the plane of the ecliptic
• Short period comets orbit the Sun in 200 years or less (e.g. Halley’s
comet, period ~ 76 years)
           • The orientation of their orbits are close to the ecliptic plane
             • Short period comets may have originated in the Kuiper belt
             • Kuiper belt comets get “kicked” into an eccentric orbit, bringing
             them into the inner part of the solar system
    The Oort cloud: a
    reservoir of
    millions or
    perhaps billions of
    comets and icy
    type of objects
    located at a
    distance of about
    50,000 to 200,000
    AU from the Sun
The development of the gas and dust tails as
the comet approaches the Sun
 When the comet begin
 approaching the Sun,
 the ices sublimate and
 release gas and dust
 from the nucleus
  The dust forms the
 dust tail which point in
 the general direction of
 the trajectory of the
 comet.
  The gas points in
 direction opposite to the
 Sun and forms the gas
 or ion tail
Comet Hale-Bopp (1997) dust and gas tails
A recent comet: Comet McNaught 2007
Images of comet C/2012 S1 ISON
It reached the closest distance from the Sun , about 1 solar diameter on
November 28, 2013 (Thanksgiving day)
An animation of comet ISON passing close to the Sun on Nov.-
Dec. 2013 (Images SOHO Spacecraft).
The nucleus did not survive the encounter. The intense heat of the
Sun broke the nucleus in many small pieces. The pieces melted and
the gasses sublimated.
         The nucleus of a comet
The first image of the
nucleus of comet
Halley was obtained by
the Giotto spacecraft in
1986 at a distance of
about 400 km.
Notice the jets coming
out of the nucleus
To the right, a diagram
of Halley’s comet
nucleus showing its
size and structure
Images of comet 67P (C-G) (Churyumov-Gerasimenko) taken by the Rosetta spacecraft
in 2014-2015.
The Rosetta spacecraft was the first spacecraft to enter orbit around a comet. It arrived on Sept. 10 th 2014.
Size of the comet are 4.1 x 4.3 km. Orbital period 6.44 years
               A comparison of the size of comet 67P (C-G) with downtown Los Angeles
   Recent images of comet 67P C-G taken by the Rosetta
   spacecraft in 2015
   The spacecraft carried a lander. The lander crash-landed on
   the surface of the comet on Sept. 30, 2016
                                                     Details of the surface
Image taken from a         An outburst of activity   showing “Sinkholes”.
distance of 150 km
                                                     “Sinkholes” form from
showing the jets
                                                     the collapse of material
                                                     after ices sublimated
Meteoroid, Meteor and Meteorite                                   Castor and Pollux
                                                                  (The Twins,
Meteoroid – interplanetary rocky material smaller                 Gemini
                                                                  constellation)
than 100m (down to grain size).
•It is called a meteor when it enter and burns in the Meteor
Earth’s atmosphere                                    radiant
                                                     (Geminids
•If some material survives the entry and makes it to meteor
the ground, it is called a meteorite                 shower)
   Meteor showers
   Most meteor showers are the result of the Earth passing
   through the orbit of a comet which has left debris along its
   path. They take the name of the constellation were the
   radiant seems to be located
   Some 2020 Meteor showers:
   Perseids ( 109P/Swift-Tuttle) - August 12-13 about 90/hour
   Orionids (Halley’s comet) – Oct 21-22 (after midnight in the
   Eastern sky, only 20/hour)
   Leonids (Comet Tempel_Tuttle) – Nov 17-18 (after midnight
   in the Eastern sky, only 20/hour)
   Geminids (Phaethon object) – December 13-14
   Probably one of the best for 2020, predicted about 120
   meteor/hour). The Moon phase will be New Moon. Good
   for observing the meteor shower.
Types of meteorites
 Stony. This are the most common meteorites
 Iron-Nickel. Easy to find using metal detectors
An iron-nickel meteorite is a fragment of a larger body. The body was
 large enough to generate internal heat and went through the
 differentiation process. Heavier material (iron, nickel) sunk to the core.
 Collisions broke the large body, exposed the central part (core) from
 which the smaller pieces came from.
   Stony-Iron
           A stony meteorite
Usually covered by a dark crust, created by the melting of the
surface during the entry through the atmosphere
A iron-nickel meteorite
The Windmanstatten pattern in the etched
slice of an iron-nickel meteorite
An example of slice of a pallasite
meteorite (olivine crystals)
Some meteorites can be large
The “Hoba” iron-nickel meteorite, in Namibia, Africa. Estimated
mass about 60 tons. Composition, 80% Fe and 16% Ni
Known meteorite impact craters sites
Meteoroids
Most meteoroids are rocky,. A small fraction are mainly iron and nickel
Some contain carbonaceous material - rich in organic material (amino acids).
This organic material is formed in interstellar space
Meteoroids are old - 4.5 billion years based on carbon dating. Most were
formed when the solar system formed
                                                 •The Barringer Crater.
                                                  Usually known as the
                                                 “meteor” crater near
                                                 Winslow, AZ
                                                 • One of the best
                                                 preserved craters
                                                 • Formed from the impact
                                                 of a 50 m body weighing
                                                 200,000 tons!
                                                 • Diameter of crater 1.2
                                                 km
                                                 • Ratio size crater/size
                                                 impacting body = 24
                                                 •Age, around 25,000 years
     Asteroids - rocks with sizes greater than 100m across
   •Most asteroids are in orbit around the Sun in what it is called the Asteroid belt between the
   orbits of Mars and Jupiter
   • About 2000 asteroids have orbits that cross Earth’s path. Called NEO, Near Earth Objects.
   • Some of these may come at distances < 0.05 AU from the Earth. The are called PHA’s
   (Potentially Hazardous Asteroids)
Some of the more recent collisions
• Extinction of the Dinosaurs
A 10-15 km size asteroid that collided about 65 millions years ago in
Chicxulub, in the Yucatan peninsula (Mexico).
It left a crater about 180 Km diameter
A layer of clay enriched in iridium found in many part of the world fits the
age of the impact.
A cloud of dust rich in iridium circled the Earth. Iridium is found in
meteorites and asteroids
The cloud of dust and the smoke of fires generated by the impact may
have shrouded the planet for a few years, extinguishing the Sun’s rays,
killing plants and disrupting the food chain
• The Tunguska event in 1908 in Siberia is one of the most recent. The
body (30m size) exploded several km above the surface. It did not create a
crater, just a depression.
• The most recent: The Chelyabink event. Fell in Russia on February 15,
2013. The size was about 17-20 m. It exploded at an altitude of several
kilometers and generated a shock wave that broke windows and took down
part of a building wall. A few pieces were recovered.
Check the spaceweather.com
website for a list of asteroids (called PHAs) coming close to the Earth!
 Asteroids range in size from 100m to ~1000km
They are composed of carbon,
iron and other rocky material.
The Asteroid belt is a group of asteriods that
appear to have never joined to make a
planet (as opposed to having once been a
planet that was later destroyed).
Some of the evidence is this:
•The total mass of all the asteroids is too small
to be a planet
•They have different chemical compositions
The reason for the asteroid belt is the presence of Jupiter...
Jupiter may have prevented the formation of
a body at the distance from the Sun where the
Asteroid belt is located.
The orbital period of those small bodies may have a
 resonance with the orbital period of Jupiter. There are
gaps in the asteroid belt at several distances from the Sun
where the orbital period is a fraction of Jupiter orbital period
(1/3, 2/5, 1/2…)
     Images of asteroids
(All the images were taken by spacecrafts)
More images of several asteroids taken by spacecrafts
The image of Vesta (Diameter 525 km, second largest asteroid) was taken by the
Dawn spacecraft mission in 2011. Vesta has a rocky composition
Comparison of
sizes of different
asteroids
       The best images of the dwarf planet (asteroid) Ceres
       Ceres diameter is 950 km. Until it was reclassified as a dwarf planet it was
       considered the largest asteroid.
       Composition: rock and ices
Best image by Hubble Space Telescope   A better image taken by the Dawn spacecraft (2015)
The best high resolution picture released from Occator
crater and the bright spot in Ceres (Dawn spacecraft).
        (The Dawn spacecraft is in orbit around Ceres)
             Ceres bright spot, a close-up.
Image taken by the Dawn spacecraft in February of 2016 from a distance of 385 km
The bright spot is
located in the center of
the Occator crater.
The close-up shows a
central dome crossed
by linear features and
fractures
The bright area may be
a crust of salt marking
the location of a salty
ocean under the surface
that broke through the
central part of the
crater.
The low density of
Ceres (2.26 g/cm3)
suggest the presence of
a substantial amount of
water
4.3 The Formation of the Solar System
        Formation of the Solar System
      Any theory to describe the formation of our Solar
        System must be consistent with these facts:
1. Each planet is isolated in space.
2. The orbits are nearly circular.
3. The orbits of the planets all lie in roughly the same plane.
4. The direction the planets orbit around the Sun is the
    same as the Sun’s rotation on its axis
    (Counterclockwise as viewed from Earth north pole).
5. The direction most planets rotate on their axes is the
    same as that for the Sun.
6. The direction of the planetary satellites’ orbits is the
    same as that of the planet’s rotation.
7. The terrestrial and Jovian planets have different
    characteristics
8. Asteroids are different from both types of planets.
9. The Kuiper belt is a collections of asteroid-size bodies
    orbiting the Sun beyond the orbit of Neptune. Their
    composition is mainly ices
10. The Oort cloud comets are primitive, icy fragments. They do
    not orbit the Sun in the plane of the ecliptic. The Oort cloud
    is located around 50,000 AU
                   But there are some exceptions
•   Venus rotates backwards (Rotational axis tilted close to 179 degrees)
•   Uranus rotates on its side (Rotational axis tilted close to 98 degrees)
•   Most small satellites or moons do not share the orbital plane of the planet
•   Earth is the only terrestrial planet with a large satellite or moon
•   Pluto has an inclined orbit respect to the orbital plane of the planets
A model for the formation of the solar system has to account for:
 Different composition of planets (rocky, gaseous, icy)
 Existence of many asteroids and comets
The nebular hypothesis (and the rejected collision theory)
     The idea that the solar system was born from the collapse of a cloud of dust and gas
      for proposed by Immanuel Kant (1755) and by Pierre Simon Laplace (40 years later).
     During the first part of the 20th century, some proposed that the solar system was the
      result of a near collision of the Sun with another star. Planets formed from debris of
      the collision. But we know now that collision (or near collisions) between two stars
      are very, very rare.
     Considering that collision are rare, the proposed idea of the collision may explain a
      unique event on how our planetary system formed but not how other planetary
      systems formed.
     During the rest of the 20th century, new ideas and theories about the formation of
      stars (and possible planets) made this collision theory obsolete and was discarded
     In 1994, the first exoplanet, 51 Pegasi was discovered (Exoplanets: planets orbiting
      other stars)
     Many more planets have been found so far in the solar neighborhood ( close to 2000
      confirmed and more than 3000 that still need confiramtion. It is clear now that
      formation of planets is not a rare event.
     Any theory about the formation of planetary system must explain the formation of
      planets, not as a single, unique and rare event but more like a common event in a
      galaxy
        Nebular Theory for Solar System formation
Our Sun and the planets originated from the collapse of an interstellar
cloud of dust and gas (nebula)
     • Normally the gas and dust does not collapse by itself.
     But a pressure wave generated from a supernova
     explosion or a density wave in the galaxy may
     compress the cloud and trigger the collapse.
     • After that, the cloud begin contracting under its own
     gravity; it develops a disk (Protoplanetary disk). The
     Sun (or a star) is formed at the center.
     • The cloud starts to spin and the smaller it contracts,
     the faster it spins.
     The reason for that is:
       Conservation of angular momentum
The cloud forms a flattened disk (solar nebula).
Why they form a flattened disk?
“Centrifugal” forces perpendicular to the rotational
 axis provide a push outward that resist the contraction.
The forces in the direction of the rotational axis pointing
away from the center are small . The gravitational forces
 along the rotational axis are not opposed by any other forces
            How a flattened protoplanetary disk forms
In addition to the forces
involved (gravitational
and “centrifugal” forces),                              Slow rotation
collisions of particles that
crosses the disk will bring
those particles to an orbit
contained in the plane of
the disk
                                                            Gravitational
             Gravitational                                  force
             force
                                                         “Centrifugal”
                                                         force
                                                        Fast rotation
Conservation of Angular Momentum
Angular momentum            mass  velocity  radius
  Conservation of angular momentum in a skater: The
  rotational speed increases when she bring her arms inside
                        Angular Momentum
   Objects rotating around a point have angular momentum.
   Consider a simple case, a small sphere orbiting a larger mass
                              L=mxvxr
    L :angular momentum of the small sphere
    m: mass of small sphere
    v: velocity of the small sphere
    r :separation between the small sphere and the larger object
Conservation of angular momentum  if r changes, v must change
 (ice skaters)
But the value of L remains constant
  Example: If r decreases to one half, v must increase by a factor of
two to keep the value of L constant
     L=mxvxr                           L = m x 2v x r/2
  We’ve seen these disks around other young stars!
A classic example is the star Beta Pictoris and its protoplanetary
disk
Beta Pictoris is about 50 light-years away. The disk is about 1000 AU across. The
star is about 100 millions years old.
It is going through the same process that the Sun went 4.6 billions years ago
Condensation Theory for Planet Formation
 • The gas in the flattened nebula would never eventually clump together to
 form planets.
 • However, the dust grains that are part of the cloud provide a way to clump
 the material together and form nucleus of condensation. Dust grains are just a
 few micrometer in size but they are the key for the process of condensing into
 bigger clumps
 Interstellar dust (grain-size particles) lies between stars – These dust grains form from
 the material ejected from stars at the end of the life of the stars. Low mass stars eject
 part of the material and may form a planetary nebula that expand and contaminate the
 interstellar medium. Large mass stars will explode as a supernova . The material ejected
 will contaminate the interstellar medium with heavy element from which the grains
 form.
 These dust grains form condensation nuclei - other
 atoms attach to them to start the “collapsing” process
 to which form smaller bodies called planetesimals.
 Planetesimals collide and stick together and form
 bigger bodies called protoplanets and finally form
 planets
                                Dark cloud of dust
                                Barnard 86
              The Eagle nebula (M16) in visible light
 The new stars being
formed and the
associated protoplanetary
disk (From which new
planets may form) reside
inside of a cloud of dust
and gas.
 Dust absorb the visible
light coming from the
stars in formation so it is
not possible to see them
in visible light
(wavelengths blue to red)
(NASA Hubble telescope images)
                    The Eagle nebula in IR
But taking
images in IR
light reveal the
presence of
these stars
(NASA Hubble
telescope images)
A comparison of the Eagle nebula in visible and IR light
The image in IR reveal the presence of stars inside and behind
the nebula
(NASA Hubble telescope images)
What happened next…..
 • Solar nebula contracts and flattens into a disk.
 • Condensation nuclei form clumps that grow
 into moon-size planetesimals.
 • Planetesimals collide, stick together and grow.
 • Growing planetesimals will form the planets
 over about 100 million years.
 • The more massive proto-planets are also able
 to sweep up large amounts of gas to become
 the Jovian planets.
 • Solar wind (Or stellar wind in general) from
 the star formation blows out the rest of the gas.
An artist’s impression of a young star and its
protoplanetary disk in the process of forming planets
                                              gas/dust
       The young Sun
                                              nebula
     solid planetesimals
      More Evidence Beyond our Solar System
    Early stages of a planetary system formation can be imaged directly
    Dust disks have large surface area and radiate effectively in the
     infrared                               A recently released ALMA image
    Hubble image of a young solar
                                              (Radio wavelengths) of
    system. Young star clearing part of the
                                              protoplanetary disk in HL Tauri,
    gas
                                              450 ly away, about 1 Myear old
         Thick disk
What creates a difference between inner and outer planets
in the solar system?
                The answer: TEMPERTURE!
•Rocky inner planets: The type of
the material that condensed out of the
nebular cloud at these higher
temperatures was metallic and rocky
in nature.
•Gaseous, bigger outer planets:
Both rock and gas could condense out
of the cloud at lower temperatures
where these planets formed.
•But gas such as H, He, water,
methane and ammonia also
condense at the low temperatures
 Why are they gaseous? – gas and ices are present at that distance in bigger amount
 Why are they bigger? - accretion onto the planet starts sooner because they are further
 from the Sun, less affected by solar wind. Because they grow bigger, larger masses of ices
 and gas are accreted and they become more massive
           Extrasolar Planets or Exoplanets
                (Planets orbiting around other stars)
 About 3,000 exoplanets have been confirmed as detected. They are in orbit around more
 that 1102 planetary systems. All these systems are in nearby stars, around the solar
 neighborhood.
 There are 460 multiple planetary (Two or more planets) systems confirmed.
 Direct detection of exoplanets is very difficult. The stars is millions of times brighter than the
 exoplanets and the exoplanets are too close to the star to be resolved.
 There are different methods to detect exoplanets. The two methods that are
 discovering more exoplanets are:
 • Observing the star’s wobble (Doppler shift) due to gravitational
 attraction of the orbiting planet(s).
 • Observing the transit of a planet in front of the star
  51 Pegasi - the first detection in 1994 (using the Doppler shift
  method) of an extrasolar planet
  A sketch of 3 planets orbiting Upsilon Andromedae! (The star
  have actually 4 planets)
For more about exoplanets, check on Planetquest, the
search for another Earth: planetquest.jpl.nasa.gov
An animation of a planet orbiting a star
The planet and the star orbit around the common center of mass (+)
Observing the Doppler shift of the absorption (or emission) lines in the
spectrum of a star will show a periodic variation in the radial velocity of the
star
Detecting planets using the Doppler shift of the star
Detecting exoplanets using the Doppler shift method
The star 51 Pegasi has one
planet orbiting the star.
We see a periodic variation in
the radial velocity of the star
The star Upsilon
Andromedae has 4 planets .
The plot clearly show two
periodicities in the radial
velocity of the star. Other
periodic variation caused
by the other two planets are
smaller and are mounted
on top of the two
periodicities
 Detecting exoplanets using the transit method
Photometry of the star will reveal a small change in the light of the star. The
light from the star is decreased by a small amount when the planet is
transiting in front of the star. The decrease is small, about 1/10,000 of the
light of the star.
Measuring the change in the light curve of the star over time, reveals the
presence of an exoplanet (Using photometry).
The Kepler spacecraft is using the transit method.
       The Kepler spacecraft
   The spacecraft was launched
    on March 7th, 2009
   It is in orbit around the Sun
   It has detected 961
    exoplanets
   3,845 exoplanets candidates
   Instrumentation: It has a 0.95
    meter diameter telescope with
    a photometer
   The spacecraft is monitoring
    145,000 stars in the Cygnus
    and Lyrae constellations
Field of view of Kepler and location of
exoplanets candidates
The region of the sky being monitored by Kepler is between
the Deneb and Vega stars in the Summer Triangle (formed by
Vega, Altair and Deneb stars)
Latest announcement of planets detected
by Kepler (March 2014)
Naming exoplanets
Exoplanets are named after the star they
 orbit. The name of the planet is the name of
 the star plus a lower case letter starting with
 b for the first planet, c for the second planet
 and so on.
Example: The star Kepler 47 has two planets,
 one planet is named Kepler 47b the other
 Kepler 47c
Examples of light curve of some of the
exoplanets detected by Kepler
If the size of the planet is large with respect to the size of the star, the dip in the light
curve is larger
A few notes regarding detection of exoplanets
   Most of the exoplanets detected have been detected in the past are of relatively
    large mass, about Neptune to Jupiter’s mass or a few times the Jupiter’s mass and
    reside close to the parent star. These planets are “easier” to detect.
   Because of their bigger mass and close distance to the star, they produce larger
    radial velocity changes in the star which are reflected in a large Doppler shift of
    the star. The shorter orbital period produce a shorter Doppler shift effect.
   Since they are close to the star, they have short orbital periods. It is easier to
    observe an occultation; the occultation occur more often. The light curve can be
    obtained in a short time.
   The detection of bigger planets is a selection effect. Small planets and farther
    away from the star may be there but are more difficult to detect because they
    produce a small Doppler shift or their orbital period is long and the dip in the light
    of the star is small.
   A few planets smaller, close or a little larger than the Earth have been detected.
   Planets with the same mass or close to Earth mass have already been detected
   Detections of Earth mass planets in the habitable zone have been detected. This is
    a high priority in the search for exoplanets.
   The habitable zone is the region around a star where water can exist in liquid
    form. Closer to the star, water will evaporate. Farther from the star, water will
    freeze
     The location of the Habitable Zone
     A plot of distance from a star as function of star mass (or temperature) where water can
exist in liquid state. Notice that the scales of the plot are logarithmic
A few important notes regarding detection of exoplanets, the location
of the habitable zone and the possibility of life on planets in that zone
      One condition for a planet to be able to harbor life is to be located in the habitable
       zone. But there are other important conditions.
      Stars of higher mass have higher temperatures and radiate more energy
        (F =  T4 ). The habitable zone must be farther from the star. Planet located a large
       distance are more difficult to discover, they have long orbital periods.
      The habitable zone in stars of lower mass (lower T) may be closer. Planets located in
       the habitable zone may have shorter orbital periods, They are “easier” to detect
      Star of larger mass evolve much faster, in a few million years. Life may not have
       enough time to start or to evolve.
      Stars of low mass evolve much slower, in a few billion years. The life time of those
       stars may be long for life to start and evolve.
      Massive stars has higher temperature and radiate more UV, not good for sustaining
       life.
      An exoplanet can be located in the habitable zone but its atmosphere may have
       evolved. They may have high temperature. The composition of the atmosphere may
       contain gases that are not good for sustaining life (Example: Venus)
      Some planets located in the habitable zone may not have the protection of a
       magnetosphere.
        Comparison of the habitable zone in the Solar
        System and in the Kepler 62 planetary system
The Kepler 62
system has 5
planets, two of
them in the
habitable zone
 The star has a
temperature of
4,925 K (Sun’s
temperature 5,800
K)
 Its luminosity is
about 0.21 Sun’s
luminosity
 Its age is about 7
billion years (Sun
is about 4.6 billion
years old)
        Kepler 47, planets around a binary star
        Comparison of Solar System and Kepler 47 habitable zones
        One of Kepler 47 planets reside in the habitable zone
        The stars are located at 3,400 ly from the Sun
 The main star
Kepler A has a
temperature of
5,636 K
 The companion
star Kepler B has
a temperature of
3,357 K
 The planet
located in the
habitable zone is
a gas giant,
about 23 times
the mass of
Earth
An interesting case: The “Vulcan” exoplanet
   A planet was discovered in orbit around the star 40 Eridani A (HD 26965) by a UF team lead
   by Professor Jian Ge and Dr. Bo Ma from the UF Astronomy Dept.
   The suggestion that this star may have a planet called Vulcan, the home planet of Mr. Spock
   in the Star Trek series, was made by a group of astronomer and Gene Roddenberry creator
   of the series Star Trek years ago. At that time nobody knew that this star may have a planet.
   The planet now called HD26965b has about twice the diameter of Earth and about 8 times
   the mass of the Earth. Its orbital period is 42 days and its distance from the star about 0.6
   AU
   The star if located at 16 ly from the Sun. Its spectral classification is K ( the Sun is classified
   as G2 with a temperature of 5,800 K)
   Here is a scale
   comparison of the solar
   system and the HD26965
   system.
   Since the star has less
   mass than the Sun, its
   temperature is lower,
   around 4,500 K. The
   habitable zone is closer
   to the star.
   The “Vulcan” exoplanet
   is inside the habitable
   zone
Potentially habitable exoplanets
(As of Nov. 2012)
An example of an image of an exoplanet in the
star Fomalhaut (Hubble Space Telescope)
Is it possible to detect the composition of gases (or chemical
elements) present in the atmosphere of an exoplanet?
The light from the star is transmitted through the atmosphere of a planet during the
primary eclipse. It can be analyzed in a spectrograph to reveal the presence of elements
and molecules in the atmosphere of the exoplanet
Sodium (Na), potassium (K), methane have been detected in the atmosphere of
exoplanets
Planet
atmosphere
Latest news regarding detection of exoplanets
     In October 2012, it was reported the discovery of an exoplanet in Alpha
      Centauri (binary star), the closest star to the solar system, 4.3 ly away
     The planet has a mass of 1.2 Earth mass, orbital period 3.2 days. The
      distance from the star is 0.04 AU. Estimated temperature is high, 1,500 K (
      For comparison, Venus 735 K)
     The detection need to be confirmed. If it can be confirmed, it will be the
      closest exoplanet to the solar system.
A summary on the latest news regarding detection of exoplanets
     Several exoplanets residing in the habitable zone have been discovered
     Exoplanets have been detected around binary stars.
     The binary star Kepler 47 has two planets orbiting around it. One of them
      in the habitable zone
  Detection of exoplanets with mass close to Earth mass
     One example is the planet discovered around Alpha Centauri with 1.2
      mass of the Earth. But it distance is too close to the star (0.04 AU) and the
      temperature is too high (1,500 K)
     Kepler 186f was announced in 2014. It has a 1.2 Earth’s mass, located in
      the habitable zone, in orbit around a red dwarf star .
     Kepler 452b was announced in 2015. It has a 1.63 Earth’s radius, located
      in the habitable zone, in orbit around a G2 star.
     Detection of an exoplanet (“Vulcan”) around the star HD26965. The star is
      located at about 16 ly from Earth. The planet has a diameter about twice
      the diameter of Earth, 8 times the mass of Earth. The planet is located in
      the habitable zone
A note regarding the structure of other planetary
systems
   Several of the planets found so far are large planets, their size and
    mass are around or bigger than Jupiter.
   Some of them are gaseous planets, with very low density. Some
    densities as low as 500 kg/m³ (Water density 1000 kg/m³)
   They are located close to the star, at a distance less than the distance of
    Mercury from the Sun. Their orbital periods are in the range of a few
    days.
   Since they are massive and have large temperature, they are called
    “hot Jupiters”
   This is an unusual configuration is we compare with structure of the
    Solar system.
   According with simulations, these planets may not have been born at a
    close distance from the star. They were formed at a larger distance and
    later they migrated inward due to interaction with the material in the
    proto planetary disk