HomeContact StarDate | About StarDate | Friends of McDonald | Sign up for Sky Tips 
McDonald ObservatoryMcDonald Observatory
A production of the University of Texas McDonald Observatory
StargazingResourcesRadioMagazineTeachersGift Shop

March/April 1999

Planet Search Continues With New Techniques
The announcement in January of the discovery of two more extrasolar planets brings the total to 17 since the first was reported in 1995. All have been detected and confirmed using the radial velocity method, in which astronomers measure the slight shift in the frequency of a star's light caused by the tug of gravity of its planets (see table below). Other detection methods are expected to bear fruit in 1999, including astronmetry, which measures a star's wobble caused by a planet; transit photometry, which looks for predictable variations in a star's brightness caused by a planet passing in front of it, and microlensing, in which a planet perturbs a star's gravitational field.

More information about extrasolar planets.

Back to March/April 1999

View back issues by year
1997 | 1998 | 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008

View back issues by issue

Copyright ©1995-2006 The University of Texas McDonald Observatory. Material on this site may be linked to, quoted or reproduced for educational or personal purposes without prior permission, provided appropriate credit is given. Teachers, scout leaders, and others may distribute the material for classroom instruction or related educational purposes. The materials may not be sold or published in any other form without written permission from The University of Texas McDonald Observatory.