The Search for Exoplanets: What Astronomers Know

The Search for Exoplanets: What Astronomers Know « Series from 2015

Series from 2015

Broadcast info
Genres: Documentary, Special Interest

Designed for everyone from armchair explorers to serious skywatchers, The Search for Exoplanets follows the numerous twists and turns in the hunt for exoplanets-the false starts, the sudden breakthroughs, and the extraordinary discoveries.

Share on
Share on Facebook
Facebook
X
Share on E-mail
E-mail

Why Study Exoplanets?

Learn about the exciting mission of exoplanetary science - the study of planets orbiting stars beyond the Sun. Review the eight planets in our solar system, which provide a baseline for understanding the more than 1,000 worlds recently discovered in our region of the Milky Way galaxy.

How to Find an Exoplanet

Given the extreme faintness of a planet relative to the star it orbits, how can astronomers possibly find it? Learn about direct and indirect methods of detection. As an example of the indirect method, discover why a planet causes a star's position to change, providing a strategy for locating exoplanets without seeing them.

Doppler and Transit Planet-Finding Methods

Explore two other indirect approaches for finding exoplanets: first, by measuring the Doppler shift in the color of a star due to the pull of an unseen orbiting planet; and second, by measuring the tiny drop in the brightness of a star as a planet transits in front of it.

Pioneers of Planet Searching

Chart the history of exoplanet hunting - from a famous false signal in the 1960s, through ambiguous discoveries in the 1980s, to the big breakthrough in the 1990s, when dozens of exoplanets turned up. Astronomers were stunned to find planets unlike anything in the solar system.

The Misplaced Giant Planets

Investigate 51 Pegasi b, the first planet detected around a Sun-like star, which shocked astronomers by being roughly the size of Jupiter but in an orbit much closer to its star than Mercury is to the Sun. Probe the strange characteristics of these "hot Jupiters," which have turned up around many stars.

Explaining the Misplaced Giant Planets

The standard theory of planet formation is based on our solar system. But does this view require revision based on the existence of misplaced giant planets-hot Jupiters circling close to their parent stars? Compare competing theories that try to resolve this conflict.

The Transits of Exoplanets

Sniffing Planetary Atmospheres

Stellar Rotation and Planetary Revolution

Super-Earths or Mini-Neptunes?

Transiting Planets and the Kepler Mission

Compact Multiplanet Systems

Planets Circling Two Stars

Lava Worlds

Earthlike Planets

Living with a Dwarf Star

Living with a Giant Star

Our Nearest Exoplanetary Neighbors

Finding Planets with Gravitational Lensing

Finding Planets with Direct Imaging

Near-Term Future Planet-Finding Projects

Long-Term Future Planet-Finding Projects

The Search for Life on Exoplanets

Coming Soon: Biosignatures, Moons, and More!