PSU: How Many Earth-like Planets Are Around Sun-like Stars?
Posted: Thu Aug 15, 2019 5:19 pm
How Many Earth-like Planets Are Around Sun-like Stars?
Penn State University | 2019 Aug 14
Occurrence Rates of Planets Orbiting FGK Stars: Combining
Kepler DR25, Gaia DR2, and Bayesian Inference ~ Danley C. Hsu et al
Penn State University | 2019 Aug 14
A new study provides the most accurate estimate of the frequency that planets that are similar to Earth in size and in distance from their host star occur around stars similar to our Sun. Knowing the rate that these potentially habitable planets occur will be important for designing future astronomical missions to characterize nearby rocky planets around sun-like stars that could support life. ...
- Artist’s impression of NASA’s Kepler space telescope, which discovered thousands of new planets. New research, using Kepler data, provides the most accurate estimate to date of how often we should expect to find Earth-like planets near Sun-like stars. Credit: NASA/Ames Research Center/W. Stenzel/D. Rutter
Thousands of planets have been discovered by NASA’s Kepler space telescope. Kepler, which was launched in 2009 and retired by NASA in 2018 when it exhausted its fuel supply, observed hundreds of thousands of stars and identified planets outside of our solar system—exoplanets—by documenting transit events. Transits events occur when a planet’s orbit passes between its star and the telescope, blocking some of the star’s light so that it appears to dim. By measuring the amount of dimming and the duration between transits and using information about the star’s properties astronomers characterize the size of the planet and the distance between the planet and its host star.
“Kepler discovered planets with a wide variety of sizes, compositions and orbits,” said Eric B. Ford ... “We want to use those discoveries to improve our understanding of planet formation and to plan future missions to search for planets that might be habitable. However, simply counting exoplanets of a given size or orbital distance is misleading, since it’s much harder to find small planets far from their star than to find large planets close to their star.”
To overcome that hurdle, the researchers designed a new method to infer the occurrence rate of planets across a wide range of sizes and orbital distances. The new model simulates ‘universes’ of stars and planets and then ‘observes’ these simulated universes to determine how many of the planets would have been discovered by Kepler in each `universe.’ ...
Occurrence Rates of Planets Orbiting FGK Stars: Combining
Kepler DR25, Gaia DR2, and Bayesian Inference ~ Danley C. Hsu et al
- Astronomical Journal 158(3):109 (2019 Sep) DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/ab31ab
- arXiv.org > astro-ph > arXiv:1902.01417 > 04 Feb 2019 (v1), 08 Jul 2019 (v3)