William Welsh, San
Diego State: Circumbinary planet systems or two sun planets are not rare
exceptions
January 12, 2012
Using data from NASA’s Kepler
Mission, astronomers have discovered two new transiting “circumbinary”
planet systems — planets that orbit two stars.
This work establishes that such “two sun” planets are not rare
exceptions, but are in fact common with many millions existing in our
Galaxy. The work was published in the journal Nature and was presented
by William Welsh of San Diego State University at the American
Astronomical Society meeting in Austin, Texas, on behalf of the Kepler
Science Team.
This
artist's concept illustrates Kepler-16b, the first planet known to
definitively orbit two stars -- what's called a circumbinary planet. The
planet, which can be seen in the foreground, was discovered by NASA's
Kepler mission.
Light-years away
The two new planets, named Kepler-34 b and Kepler-35 b, are both gaseous
Saturn-size planets.
Kepler-34 b orbits its two sun-like stars every 289 days, and the stars
themselves orbit and eclipse each other every 28 days. The eclipses
allow a very precise determination of the stars’
sizes.
Kepler-35 b revolves about a pair of smaller stars (80 and 89 percent of
the sun’s mass) every 131 days, and the stars orbit and eclipse one
another every 21 days. Both systems reside in the constellation Cygnus,
with Kepler-34 at 4,900 light-years from Earth, and Kepler-35 at 5,400
light-years, making these among the most distant planets discovered.
While long anticipated in both science and science fiction, the
existence of a circumbinary planet orbiting a pair of normal stars was
not definitively established until the discovery of Kepler-16 b,
announced by the Kepler Team last September. Like Kepler-16 b, these new
planets also transit (eclipse) their host stars, making their existence
unambiguous.
When only Kepler-16 b was known, many questions remained about the
nature of circumbinary planets — what kinds of orbits, masses, radii,
temperatures, etc., could they have? And, most of all, was Kepler-16 b
just a fluke?
With the discovery of Kepler-34 b and 35 b, astronomers can now answer
many of those questions and begin to study an entirely new class of
planets.
First
of millions
“It
was once believed that the environment around a pair of stars would be
too chaotic for a circumbinary planet to form, but now that we have
confirmed three such planets, we know that it is possible, if not
probable, that there are at least millions in the galaxy,” said Welsh,
who led the team of 46 investigators involved in this research.
Laurance Doyle of the SETI Institute, co-author of this paper and
lead-author of the Kepler-16 discovery, further stated, “With this
paper, the new field of comparative circumbinary planetology is now
established.”
The discovery was made possible by the three unique capabilities of the
Kepler space telescope:
Its ultra-high precision
Its ability to simultaneously
observe roughly 160,000 stars
Its long-duration
near-continuous measurements of the brightness of stars
Additional work using
ground-based telescopes provided velocity measurements of the stars
needed to confirm that these candidates are really planets
“The search is on for more circumbinary planets,” said co-author Joshua
Carter of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, “and we hope
to use Kepler for years to come.
Crazy climate
A
circumbinary planet has two suns, not just one. The distances between
the planet and stars are continually changing due to their orbital
motion, so the amount of sunlight the planet receives varies
dramatically.
“These planets can have really crazy climates that no other type of
planet could have,” said Jerome Orosz, a co-author from San Diego State
University. “It would be like cycling through all four seasons many
times per year, with huge temperature changes.”
Welsh added, “The effects of these climate swings on the atmospheric
dynamics, and ultimately on the evolution of life on habitable
circumbinary planets, is a fascinating topic that we are just beginning
to explore.”
Funding for this work was provided in part by NASA and the National
Science Foundation.