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All the extrasolar planets
discovered so far have three common characteristics: The extrasolar planets discovered first revolve around the stars
51 Pegasi, 70 Virginis, 47 Ursa Majoris, 55 Cancer, Ypsilon
Andromeda and Tau Bootis. All these stars are rather close
to us., We can actually see 47 Ursa Majoris and 70 Virginis with the
naked eye on a clear spring evening. The masses of these planets range from slightly less to many times
more than Jupiter's mass. The most amazing factor is without doubt,
the small distance from their central stars. In the case of 51
Peg, the companion is almost half the mass of Jupiter and is placed at
only 0.05 astronomical units (about 7.5 million km) from its star,
which is 100 times closer than Jupiter and 20 times closer than the
Earth is to our Sun. The same applies to most of the other known extrasolar planets. In
our solar system, the giant planets are placed in the outskirts and
the terrestrial ones are closer to the Sun. So, this may mean that
those exoplanets were formed farther out and then migrated inwards and
came much closer to their star. One of the important questions, concerning whether other planetary
systems exist with more than one planet around a star, was answered
recently. We know now that Ypsilon Andromeda has three giant planets
orbiting their central star at close distances, less than 2.5 AU (350
miiion km) away. This was the first planetary extrasolar system
to have been discovered and as the observations continued and new
discoveries were made, two more planetary systems were soon found. Who
knows what the future will bring? On the basis of these discoveries of small planets around a pulsar
and giant planets around foreign suns, it appears quite likely that
our solar system does not represent the only possible type of
planetary system, indeed it is probably not EVEN of the most common
type. |
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Last updated July 2, 2001