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MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIF. 91109 TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov
Jane Platt (818) 354-0880
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
Donald Savage (202) 358-1547
NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C.
NEWS RELEASE: 2004-103 April
15, 2004
Cosmic Magnifying Glass: Distant Star Reveals Planet
Like Sherlock Holmes holding a magnifying glass to unveil hidden
clues, modern day astronomers used cosmic magnifying effects to
reveal a planet orbiting a distant star.
This marks the first discovery of a planet around a star beyond
Earth's solar system using gravitational microlensing. A star or
planet can act as a cosmic lens to magnify and brighten a more distant
star lined up behind it. The gravitational field of the foreground
star bends and focuses light, like a glass lens bending and focusing
starlight in a telescope. Albert Einstein predicted this effect
in his theory of general relativity and confirmed it with our Sun.
"The real strength of microlensing is its ability to detect
low-mass planets," said Dr. Ian Bond of the Institute for Astronomy
in Edinburgh, Scotland, lead author of a paper appearing in the
May 10 Astrophysical Journal Letters. The discovery was made possible
through cooperation between two international research teams: Microlensing
Observations in Astrophysics (Moa) and Optical Gravitational Lensing
Experiment (Ogle). Well-equipped amateur astronomers might use this
technique to follow up future discoveries and help confirm planets
around other stars.
The newly discovered star-planet system is 17,000 light years away,
in the constellation Sagittarius. The planet, orbiting a red dwarf
parent star, is most likely one-and-a-half times bigger than Jupiter.
The planet and star are three times farther apart than Earth and
the Sun. Together, they magnify a farther, background star some
24,000 light years away, near the Milky Way center.
In most prior microlensing observations, scientists saw a typical
brightening pattern, or light curve, indicating a star's gravitational
pull was affecting light from an object behind it. The latest observations
revealed extra spikes of brightness, indicating the existence of
two massive objects. By analyzing the precise shape of the light
curve, Bond and his team determined one smaller object is only 0.4
percent the mass of a second, larger object. They concluded the
smaller object must be a planet orbiting its parent star.
Dr. Bohdan Paczynski of Princeton University, Princeton, N.J.,
an OGLE team member, first proposed using gravitational microlensing
to detect dark matter in 1986. In 1991, Paczynski and his student,
Shude Mao, proposed using microlensing to detect extrasolar planets.
Two years later, three groups reported the first detection of gravitational
microlensing by stars. Earlier claims of planet discoveries with
microlensing are not regarded as definitive, since they had too
few observations of the apparent planetary brightness variations.
"I'm thrilled to see the prediction come true with this first
definite planet detection through gravitational microlensing,"
Paczynski said. He and his colleagues believe observations over
the next few years may lead to the discovery of Neptune-sized, and
even Earth-sized planets around distant stars.
Microlensing can easily detect extrasolar planets, because a planet
dramatically affects the brightness of a background star. Because
the effect works only in rare instances, when two stars are perfectly
aligned, millions of stars must be monitored. Recent advances in
cameras and image analysis have made this task manageable. Such
developments include the new large field-of-view Ogle-III camera,
the Moa-II 1.8 meter (70.8 inch) telescope, being built, and cooperation
between microlensing teams.
"It's time-critical to catch stars while they are aligned,
so we must share our data as quickly as possible," said Ogle
team-leader Dr. Andrzej Udalski of Poland's Warsaw University Observatory.
Udalski in Poland and Paczynski in the U.S lead the Polish/American
project. It operates at Las Campanas Observatory in Chile, run by
the Carnegie Institution of Washington, and includes the world's
largest microlensing survey on the 1.3 meter (51-inch) Warsaw Telescope.
NASA and the National Science Foundation fund the Optical Gravitational
Lensing Experiment in the U.S. The Polish State Committee for Scientific
Research and Foundation for Polish Science funds it in Poland. Microlensing
Observations in Astrophysics is primarily a New Zealand/Japanese
group, with collaborators in the United Kingdom and U.S. New Zealand's
Marsden Fund, NASA and National Science Foundation, Japan's Ministry
of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology, and the
Japan Society support it for the Promotion of Science.
Images and information about the latest research are available
on the Internet at
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/releases/2004/103a.cfm
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