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Andrew Yee
September 16th 04, 04:59 PM
Anglo-Australian Observatory
Epping, Australia

Contact:
Ms Helen Sim
Media Liaison Officer, Anglo-Australian Observatory
Tel: 02-9372-4251 (office)
Email:

15 September 2004

AAPS announces five new extra-solar planets

The five new planets include the first multiple planet systems detected by the
AAPS, and three low-mass (ie Saturnian- or sub-Saturnian-mass planets).

The multiple planet systems include two planets detected around the star mu Ara
(in the constellation of Ara "The Altar"). The inner planet has an orbital
period of 645 days and a minimum mass of 1.7 Jupiter masses. The outer planet
has an orbital period of 8.2 years and a minimum mass of 3.1 Jupiter masses.
Both planets have quite eccentric (ie non-circular) orbits. These two planets
were recently "joined" by a third inner (but very much smaller) planet in a 9
day orbit announced by Santos et al.

The three low-mass planets have all been detected with orbital periods of
between 26 and 129 days, and minimum masses of between 0.16 and 0.4 times that
of Jupiter. These low-mass planets are exciting to the Anglo-Australian Planet
Search team because they all have small velocity amplitudes -- that is the
represent the detection of quite small "wobbles" in the parent stars due to
these planets. Indeed at just 12 to 18m/s these results obtained from data
streams stretching back to 1998, represent exactly the levels of precision that
our search needs to attain to detect Solar Systems like our own around other
stars via the orbital motion of a Jupiter-like planet in a Jupiter-like 12 year
orbit. They give us confidence that in the next 6 years, if there are any "Solar
System-like" systems amongst our 240 targets stars, we will find them.

How it works

A Jupiter-like planet exerts a small gravitational pull on its parent star,
causing the star to wobble. The velocity of this wobble depends on the distance
at which the planet orbits, and the mass of the planet. For typical giant
planets the velocity variation is in the range 1 to 100 m/s.

This motion can be detected via the Doppler Effect. When the unseen planet is
moving away from the Earth, the star will move slightly towards the Earth. The
light emitted by a star when it is doing this is Doppler shifted to shorter
(bluer) wavelengths. The reverse happens when the unseen planet moves towards
the Earth -- the star moves away, and the light it emits is shifted to longer
(redder) wavelengths. Because of the small velocities involved, the effect is
subtle -- it doesn't effect the apparent colour of the star, for example. But it
can be detected by very high precision astronomical instruments like the
University College London Echelle Spectrograph (or UCLES) on the AAT.

A star with a Jupiter-mass planet will be revealed by the periodic Doppler shift
of its light. After one or two orbital periods the information from the Doppler
measurements allows us to calculate the orbit and mass of the unseen planet. Our
current measurement precision is 3 meters per second (a brisk walk). For
comparison, Jupiter causes the Sun to wobble with a velocity of 12.5 meters per
second over a 12 year period. Saturn induces a 2.7 meter per second wobble on
the Sun with a 30 year period. The other planets (in particular the terrestrial
planets like the Earth, Mars and Venus) are far too small to produce a
measureable effect on the Sun.

The project

AAPS has been operating since January 1998, and is expected to run until 2010,
at which point we will have observed for long enough to detect Jupiter-like
planets in Jupiter-like orbits around other stars. We are currently monitoring
the 200 nearest and brightest Sun-like stars visible from the AAT's Southern
Hemisphere location on 20 nights per year. We perform these observations using
the University College London Echelle Spectrograph (UCLES). UCLES enables us to
observe almost the entire visible spectrum in a single observation. Doppler
shifts in the stellar spectra are measured with reference to a precision
calibrated iodine vapour absorption cell (ike that shown to the left). The
absorption that produces the faint purple colour of the iodine gas in this cell,
imprints a dense network of narrow lines on our spectra, telling us everything
we need to know about UCLES's performance.
The only example of a star with planets that know in much detail is our own
Solar System. Ultimately we need to know what fraction of Sun-like stars have
Jupiter- and Saturn-mass planets in Jupiter- and Saturn-like orbits. In other
words, what fraction of extra-solar planetary systems are similar to our own?

The Anglo-Australian Planet Search Team

R. Paul Butler (Carnegie Institution of Washington)
Chris Tinney (Anglo-Australian Observatory)
Hugh Jones (Liverpool John Moores University)
Geoff Marcy (University of California Berkeley, San Francisco State University)
Chris McCarthy (San Francisco State University)
Alan Penny (Rutherford Appleton Laboratory)
Brad Carter (University of Southern Queensland)

[NOTE: Images supporting this release are available at
http://www.aao.gov.au/local/www/cgt/planet/index.html ]