Astronomy

(Marcin) #1

48 ASTRONOMY • SEPTEMBER 2017


“Astrometry, it turns out, is
just tough to do from the
ground because we’re looking
through Earth’s atmosphere
and the stars are twinkling,”
Fischer says.
One of the f law’s discoverers
was the new Sproul Observatory
head, Wulff-Dieter Heintz.
Another observatory employee,
John L. Hershey, published a
paper in The Astronomical
Journal in June 1973. Hershey
had studied the tiny M-dwarf
star Gliese 793, and as he pored
through photographic plates,
he noticed something: It had
the exact same data discontinu-
ity as Barnard’s Star.
But the United States Naval
Observatory and Allegheny
Observatory at the University
of Pittsburgh found no shift in
the motion of Barnard’s Star.
“When his work was
checked over by other observa-
tories using the more powerful
plate constant method, his
unseen planetary companions


to Barnard’s Star vanished,”
DeVorkin says.
That didn’t deter van de
Kamp, but it did damage his
friendships with Heintz and
George Gatewood, the astrono-
mer at Allegheny who con-
firmed the lack of perturbations
in the motion of Barnard’s Star.
As late as the 160th Meeting of
the American Astronomical
Society, held in Troy, New York,
in 1982, van de Kamp was still
pushing for his planets.
“Current analysis for one
orbit clearly yields a perturba-
tion with a period of 12 years,”
his abstract read. “As before, a
desirable improvement is made
by an additional perturbation
with a period of 20 years.”
Incidentally, at this same
conference, van de Kamp’s pro-
tégé Lippincott presented the
possibility of planetary-mass
companions around three other
stars. One of those stars,
Luyten’s Star, has been recently
confirmed to host planets.
However, Lippincott suggested
two long-period gas giants,
whereas the planetary compan-
ions found in March 2017 were
a super-Earth and an Earth-
mass planet. These planets
don’t account for the magni-
tude of Lippincott’s possible
detection. Another 1982 paper
by Lippincott suggested — but
far from asserted — that a
planet could cause f lare activity
on EV Lacertae.

“In general, people have
been skeptical about planetary
discoveries, often for good rea-
son — [van de Kamp’s] is far
from the only claim of a plan-
etary discovery that turned out
to be incorrect,” Jensen says.
“And even the initial discover-
ies of exoplanets in the mid-
1990s were met with some
skepticism initially, though of
course now we have over-
whelming evidence of the rich
diversity of planets around
other stars.”
Luyten’s Star is the only star
in van de Kamp’s cadre with a
confirmed planetary system. To

date, no planets have been
found around Barnard’s Star,
Lalande 21185, or 61 Cygni.
Gatewood did present a
paper in 1996 claiming that he
had found several planetary-
mass companions around
Lalande 21185. This result, too,
was based on astrometry.
Gatewood’s planets also were
cast in doubt and remain
unconfirmed. A February 2017
paper suggested evidence of a
3.8-Earth-mass planet, though
it also remains ambiguous.
Lalande 21185 just can’t
catch a break.
Still, van de Kamp’s work
left him “highly respected” at
the end of his career, according
to DeVorkin. And Sproul
Observatory has since been
replaced at Swarthmore with a
new one: Peter van de Kamp
Observatory. As part of the
Kilodegree Extremely Little
Telescope program, the obser-
vatory has turned up planets
— this time, real ones.
“Our collaboration has

published discoveries of about
15 exoplanets so far, and many
of the discovery papers include
data from our telescope here,”
Jensen says. “Although van de
Kamp was wrong about Barnard’s
Star, he made important contri-
butions to astronomy, and I’m
pleased that we can honor and
remember his work by having
his name on our observatory.”

Van Biesbroeck 8B
When astronomers discov-
ered an object around van
Biesbroeck 8 (vB8) in 1984,
they weren’t quite sure what
they were seeing. The New
Yo rk Ti m e s ran the headline
“Possible Planet Found Outside
the Solar System,” with author
John Noble Wilford stating, “If
this is indeed a planet, the dis-
covery would be a clear break-
through in the long search for
extrasolar planetary systems
and the first direct evidence to
support a premise underlying
theories of possible extrater-
restrial life, which is that plan-
etary systems are not unique to
the Sun and may even be com-
mon in the universe.”
But there was a problem
with the puff of gas that had
been spotted in the infrared:
Although it was the size of
Jupiter, further studies showed
an outsized inf luence on its
parent star. In fact, this is a
common problem in the hunt
for planets. There are objects
that are neither stars nor plan-
ets, called brown dwarfs, which
can be easily mistaken for plan-
etary companions. Mass esti-
mates on vB8’s companion were
hard to nail down — some-
where between 30 and 80
Jupiter masses. To several
astronomers, this indicated a
brown dwarf.
Jill Tarter of the SETI
Institute first gave brown
dwarfs their name. Brown
dwarfs accumulate matter in
the same way as stars, but fail
to attain enough mass to ignite
hydrogen fusion. Stars fuse
hydrogen into helium, which
can only occur above a certain

The early years of planetary detection sparked debate as discoveries
accumulated. Of the first 19 planets discovered, half were actually
brown dwarfs. The problem persists today, as more accurate mass
measurements of hefty planets reveal instead brown dwarfs.
In 2009, the Kepler telescope inundated astronomers with new
data. Previous false detections were relabeled candidates, while some
candidates became false detections. But only one confirmed Kepler
planet has ever been retracted: Kepler-32e, the result of a clerical error.
The Gliese 581 system has seen quite the volley back and forth. In
2010, astronomers found two or three potentially habitable planets:
Gliese 581b, c, and e. But the proposed Gliese 581f was soon ruled out,
while the status of Gliese 581g, the most potentially habitable planet,
has long been cast in doubt.
Alpha Centauri Bb, discovered in 2012, was such a weak detection
that it became a high-profile retraction. Many of the planet’s discover-
ers joined the Pale Red Dot team, which successfully found the Earth-
mass planet Proxima Centauri b in the same system in 2016. — J. W.

MODERN GHOSTS


Project
Daedalus

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