Good morning. I am your replacement
driver and tour guide. Your previous driver, um, has been... has been asked to
stay home today.
Hope you had a large breakfast,
because we’re going to visit several ‘HD’ systems on this leg, and it could be
a long time until supper. Everybody buckled in? If not, get that way, ‘cause we’re
headed out.
Okay, on the right side is HD 106906 b. It’s 11 times the size of
Jupiter. Yes, it does have a parent star. It’s one of those bright bits of
light ahead of us. This planet’s distance from its star is 650 times as Earth’s
distance from our sun, so I can’t blame you for asking. Despite being so remote
from its star, the average temperature on the surface is 1500° Celsius, which
is 2,732° Fahrenheit. That’s pretty toasty warm, in my mind. Scientists say it
shouldn’t exist at all, being so large and so far from its parent. Where did it
get enough material that far out? But however it came to exist, it’s only 13 Million years old. Just a baby, really,
since the universe is over 14 Billion
years. So maybe it just hasn’t had a chance to cool off since it came into
being?
Now, right over here is Osiris, more
formally known as HD 209458 b, which
was the first planet to be seen as it crossed in front of its star. It’s also
the first planet to have its light directly detected. Its discovery showed that
transit observations were possible, which opened up a whole new realm of
exoplanet discovery.
The planet ahead of us is HD 189733 b. It’s about the size of
Jupiter, and has been studied quite a bit ever since scientists discovered it
transiting its star while they studied that star using X-ray frequencies. This
is also one of the first planets to have its atmosphere ‘sniffed’ to determine
its composition. I don’t remember the full list, but I do remember that the
atmosphere contains methane. No, that doesn’t necessarily mean there’s cows on
that planet. Methane can be produced naturally. It doesn’t have to be a
biological byproduct.
Now we come to HD 114762 b, which was discovered in 1989. This is the first
discovered planet to be orbiting a sun-like star. However, because its mass is
- as seems so popular - 11 times that of Jupiter, and because it only takes 84
days to complete an orbit, it was initially thought to be a brown dwarf. But it’s
not. As a comparison, tiny little Mercury takes 88 days to complete an orbit
around our sun.
I have to ask you to please be quiet
as I approach this one. If it was up to me, we wouldn’t even bother with this
one. Too dangerous, if you ask me; you never quite know what to expect from HD 80606 b. It’s orbit is so
eccentric-- Oh! Hang on! ... Whew! That was close. I think we’ll be safe now,
at least for a few minutes. Besides its highly eccentric orbit, HD 80606 b also
displays plenty of storms and atmospheric heating, and you can plainly see how
fast it rotates.
Okay, that’s our tour for today. I’ll
take you back to base so you can get some supper. I know I’m ready for it. No,
I’m sorry, I don’t know who will be your next driver and tour guide. No, I don’t
know where you’ll be taken, either. From the looks of it, you still have quite
a number of planets to visit. We are all qualified drivers and tour guides, ma’am,
otherwise, we wouldn’t have the job.
http://www.express.co.uk/news/science/643662/The-10-weirdest-planets-to-have-been-discovered-so-far
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/20-intriguing-exoplanets
www.space.com/159-strangest-alien-planets.html