˜yÐÄvlog

Advertisement

Advertisement

extrasolar planet

/ Ä•°ì′s³Ù°ùÉ™-²õÅ′±ôÉ™°ù /

  1. A planet that orbits a star other than the Sun. The first such planet to be discovered, in 1991, was found orbiting a pulsar, although most of the more than 100 extrasolar planets that have since been identified orbit normal stars. Many of them, known as hot Jupiters , are very large and revolve around their star in extremely close orbits, at less than the distance of Mercury's orbit around the Sun. Other Jupiter-sized and larger planets have been found in highly eccentric orbits. Evidence suggests that extrasolar planets may be relatively common throughout the universe. In 2004, astronomers located the first extrasolar planet with an atmosphere containing oxygen and carbon. The planet, HD 209458b (also called Osiris), orbits a star 150 light-years from Earth. The apparent lack of terrestrial, Earth-sized planets among those that have so far been discovered may simply be the result of the much greater difficulty in identifying smaller, less massive bodies at such great distances.
  2. Also called exoplanet


Discover More

Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

It was the site from which astronomers sent an interstellar radio message in 1974, in case any extraterrestrials might hear it, and where the first known extrasolar planet was discovered, in 1992.

From

In 1995, Mayor and his then-student Queloz made the first discovery of an extrasolar planet orbiting a Sun-like star.

From

Fellow laureates Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz of the University of Geneva revolutionized astronomy, the Nobel Committee said, when in 1995 they announced the discovery of a large, gaseous world circling a star 50 light-years from our sun — the first extrasolar planet found around a sun-like star.

From

The finding makes the world - which is called K2-18b - the most likely extrasolar planet to support life.

From

Keck was to have studied the extrasolar planet at the same time as the Hubble Space Telescope and a telescope on board the International Space Station.

From

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement