The Discovery of Exoplanets

In 1995, the scientific magazine Nature published a research article (Volume 378, page 355) announcing the discovery of the first extrasolar companion, a giant planet, located around a "live" star of solar type, named 51 Pegasi. Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz of the Geneva Observatory made this historical discovery that was based on radial velocity measurements with a telescope at the Haute Provence Observatory in France.

The reference to a "live star" is made, as opposed to an old neutron star (or "pulsar") that is at the end of its life. In fact, the very first extrasolar planet, one of the size of Earth, was discovered by Alexander Wolszczan in 1991 by means of extremely accurate radio observations, in orbit around a neutron star, known as PSR 1257+12. This star rotates at the incredible speed of 161 revolutions per second (the period is 6.21 milliseconds) and is a pulsar, i.e., a dead star, the extremely compact remains of a sun bigger than ours that exploded as a huge supernova many millions of years ago.

Geoff Marcy and Paul Butler of San Francisco University have also discovered many planets around solar type stars and other astronomers are joining in the hunt.

Since 1998, the CORALIE spectrometer on the Swiss 1.2-m Leonard Euler telescope at the ESO La Silla Observatory has been very successful in the search for exoplanets.

New results are published regularly on the related websites:

Last updated July 3, 2001