ASTRONEWS
0 h
6 h
12 h
18 h
0.5°
1°
NCP
Polaris
(2013)
Polaris
(2102)
2h48m
5h59m
16 ASTRONOMY t FEBRUARY 2014
Astronomers have discovered more than
1,000 planets orbiting stars other than the
Sun, but uncovering those worlds’ charac-
teristics is much more difficult. The main
method for finding exoplanets is to watch a
star’s light dim, which happens if a body
passes between it and Earth. NASA’s Kepler
mission used this transit technique to tally
some 3,500 candidate planets; scientists
have confirmed about 160 of those. But a
planetary transit can tell astronomers only
how wide the planet is — it says nothing
about mass and thus density. And without
a mass measurement, researchers have no
way of knowing the planet’s composition.
Two groups report online October 30 in
Nature their studies of an exoplanet orbit-
ing extremely close to a Sun-like star. That
world has a size and density nearly identi-
cal to Earth’s.
Andrew Howard of the University of
Hawaii at Manoa and Francesco Pepe of
the University of Geneva lead separate
teams that studied the planet now known
as Kepler-78b. From Kepler observations,
the scientists knew the world is about 1.
times as wide as Earth and completes an
orbit in just 8.5 hours.
Both teams used ground-based tele-
scopes to observe how the light from
Kepler-78b’s host star shifts. This shift is a
result of the planet’s gravity pulling slightly
on the star toward and away from Earth.
(When moving toward, the light appears
bluer, when away, redder.) They could
determine how massive the planet is from
how much the light shifts. The answer:
Howard’s team measured 1.69 Earth masses
while Pepe’s team calculated 1.86.
By combining Kepler-78b’s volume (cal-
culated from its radius) and mass, the two
teams found slightly different density val-
ues, but both remarkably similar to Earth’s:
Howard’s team calculated 5.3 grams/cm^3
and Pepe’s team 5.6 g/cm^3 (our planet’s is
5.5 g/cm^3 ).
The astronomers also tried to determine
Kepler-78b’s composition by comparing
their calculations to different computa-
tional models. Pepe’s team wrote that “the
planet has a rocky interior and most prob-
ably a relatively large iron core (perhaps
comprising 40 percent of the planet by
mass).” Howard’s team calculated that iron
makes up anywhere from 0 to 53 percent of
Kepler-78b’s mass. Earth’s composition by
mass is roughly 67 percent silicate rock and
33 percent iron.
While this newly analyzed world might
seem like an Earth twin at first glance, the
reality is much different. Kepler-78b orbits
its star extraordinarily close-in — one-
hundredth of our planet’s distance from the
Sun. That proximity means its surface is a
searing 2300 to 3100 kelvins (3700 to 5100°
Fahrenheit). — L. K.
SPACE SCIENCE UPDATE
Planet with
earth-like
comPosition
found
MARS ROCKS. The Curiosity rover’s recent measurements of two kinds of argon gas in the martian atmosphere confirm that
some meteorites found on Earth are in fact from Mars, reported scientists online November 6 in Geophysical Research Letters.
how the
north star moves
Supernova’s
original star
confirmed
Scientists observe the sky
looking for objects that
change over short inter-
vals, like the rapid bright-
ening of a supernova.
Such explosions mark the
death of stars, but learn-
ing the original sun’s
characteristics is difficult.
Astronomers using the
intermediate Palomar
Transient Factory (iPTF)
search have identified the
initial star of Supernova
iPTF13bvn, which
appeared in the nearby
galaxy NGC 5806 in June
- This supernova was
a rare type Ib, and the
study published online
October 4 in Astronomy & Astrophysics marked the
first time scientists confirmed the original star of this
kind of stellar blast.
After comparing archived Hubble Space Tele-
scope images to those taken after the explosion had
faded away, Jose Groh of Geneva Observatory and
colleagues could confirm the star that exploded. It
was a “Wolf-Rayet,” which is a hot massive star that
sheds its outer gaseous layer in a violent stellar
wind. The star, says Groh’s team, had about 11 times
the Sun’s mass right before it exploded. — L. K.
EARTH TWIN? Kepler-78b’s density is similar
to our planet’s, and this world likely has an
Earth-like composition of rock and iron. CFA
FAST
FACT
ZOOM GOES POLARIS. Polaris (Alpha [α] Ursae
Minoris), our North Star, does not sit at the exact posi-
tion of the North Celestial Pole (NCP). Currently, Polaris
lies 0.68° from the NCP and is moving closer. It will
reach its nearest point in 2102, when it will lie at a dis-
tance of 0.47°. ASTRONOMY: MICHAEl E. BAKICH ANd ROEN KElly
Polaris ranks as the sky’s
48th-brightest star. It shines
at magnitude 2.0.
SUPERNOVA SUN.
Astronomers compared
the location of a June
2013 supernova (top) with
archived Hubble Space
Telescope images (below)
to determine what star
(circled) likely exploded
in the supernova. IAIR ARCAvI
(WEIzMANN INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE)
After supernova blast
Before supernova