UGA Logo Office of Public Affairs Public Affairs 2
News Service UGA home link
Search link
Contact Us
UGA NEWS Service
News Release
Last Updated: Sep 23rd, 2009 - 16:32:23
Search




For releases prior to July 2003

UGA News Bureau

Top News Storiesmore...
In the Newsmore...
Master Calendarmore...
Advisoriesmore...
All News Releasesmore...
Columnsmore...
Faculty/staff newspaper
News from Schools & Colleges more...
Media Resources
Campaign and election experts more...
Back to School Features more...
Media contacts more...
Experts directory more...
e-Newsmore...
Put UGA's top stories on your sitemore...
Special Reports

Latest budget information

Arch News - August 7, 2009
Response to Board of Regents request for UGA budget plan

Arch News - July 22, 2009
Budget update

University of Georgia President Michael F. Adams gave a budget update to the UGA community during the April 23 meeting of the University Council at the Georgia Center for Continuing Education Conference Center and Hotel. A video presentation and talking points are available for viewing.

Arch News - April 22, 2009
Upcoming budget presentation

Arch News - April 10, 2009
Status of the FY10 state budget

UGA president provides budget update
University of Georgia President Michael F. Adams gave members of University Council an update on UGA’s budget Thursday, Dec. 4 in wake of recent actions by the University System of Georgia Board of Regents to help meet an anticipated directive from state officials to increase the budget cut to 8 percent from the current 6 percent.
View December 4, 2008 Budget Update

Public forum on University Budget
On Wednesday, Sept. 17, President Michael F. Adams and other senior university officials delivered a presentation about the impact of current economic challenges and responded to questions from the audience. Links to archived video of the first budget forum on Sept. 5.
View September 1, 2008 forum online →
View September 5, 2008 forum online →
President's talking points [pdf] →
UGA Fiscal Update [ppt] →

Information on the April 25 off-campus shooting more...
Information on the national outbreak of H1N1 virus (commonly known as swine flu) more...
President's speeches more...
UGA's Master Plan more...
The UGA Century more...
40th Anniversary of
UGA's Desegregation more...
UGA Responds: 9/11 more...
Featured Research more...
Commencement Addresses more...
ARCHE Reports more...
University System of Georgia
news publications
Legislative Updates more...
The System Supplement more...
Value-Added USG Serves Georgiamore...
A Worthy Investmentmore...
UGA Open Records
Request procedure, form and FAQsmore...
The Office of the Attorney General of Georgiamore...
The Georgia Secretary of State Open Recordsmore...
The Georgia First Amendment Foundationmore...
Contact UGA Open Records Managermore...

UGA astronomer part of team that takes first direct photographs of planets outside our own Solar System
Writer: Philip Lee Williams, 706/542-8501, phil@franklin.uga.edu
Contact: Inseok Song, 706/542-7518, song@uga.edu
Dec 4, 2008, 14:21

Email this article
Printer friendly page

Athens, Ga. – Pegasus, the mythical winged horse, left more to human history than the fanciful idea of equine flight. The name wound up on a constellation that’s been known by that name for more than two thousand years.

Now, Pegasus is unexpectedly figuring in a scientific breakthrough, and an astronomer at the University of Georgia is at the center of the discovery.

Inseok Song is part of a team that in mid-November reported the first direct photographs of planets outside our own Solar System. The three planets imaged by the team orbit a star called HR 8799 in the constellation of Pegasus. The discovery, one team member says, makes it “only a matter of time before we get a dot that’s blue and Earthlike.”

“Unfortunately, that’s not true of these three planets, which are gaseous and not remotely habitable,” said Song. “But it’s not unreasonable to think that there are Earthlike planets orbiting HR 8799 hidden in the glow of the star and waiting to be discovered.”

The research was reported in the online edition of the journal Science and involves researchers from the United States, Canada and England.

The scientists made the images using the Gemini and Keck telescopes on the Mauna Kea mountaintop in Hawaii. While the new so-called “exoplanets” are too faint and too close to the central star to see with the human eye, with telescopes or binoculars one can spot the greenish star in Pegasus.

The discovery drew international attention and was reported on the same day as a similar finding of one exoplanet at another star, reported by a NASA team using the Hubble Space Telescope.

HR 8799 has long interested astronomers because it is a sun that is roughly the size of our own, though 1.5 times larger. At 130 light years (trillions of miles) from Earth, it is a relatively close star, but the planets imaged by the team including Song have from seven to 10 times the mass of Jupiter. HR 8799 is also a young star, “only” around 60 million years old.

“Before this, the only way we could determine possible exoplanets was by measuring a wobble they created in their host star or seeing if they dim the star’s light as they pass before it,” said Song, as assistant professor in the department of physics and astronomy in UGA’s Franklin College of Arts and Sciences. “What we did was obtain the first actual photographs of a planetary system—three planets, not just one—circling a star outside our Solar System.”

The vastness of space is difficult to comprehend when talking about taking photographs of these kinds of stars. Our Solar System is in the Milky Way galaxy, which has between 200 and 400 billion stars, for example. But scientists estimate there could be as many as 100 billion galaxies in the observable Universe, and in each galaxy there might be anywhere between 10 million and a trillion stars. And many of these stars could host solar systems not unlike our own.

In the past 13 years, astronomers have discovered nearly 300 planets outside our Solar System, but their existence has been shown only by inference rather than directly.

“At some point, as we improve the imaging techniques, it may well be possible to capture an image of an Earth-like, rocky planet, but we’re not there yet,” said Song. “We believe that rocky planets lie within the gas giants toward a system’s sun, so we do know where to look at least.”

One of Song’s contributions was the idea that the scientists should look for young planets that still maintain the glow from their creation. All planets slowly grow dim over billions of years after they are formed, so younger exoplanets will glow more brightly than older ones and thus be easier to see.

“Finding young planets required finding young stars,” said Song.

He and his colleagues, using publicly available stellar surveys of space, quickly identified some 3,000 young candidate stars very near to the Earth, and after studying the light spectra from them, discovered several hundred “young” and “nearby” stars, and persistent work at the Hawaii observatories led them to HR 8799.

While information discovered at observatories can be accessed at remote locations, Song made numerous trips there over a period of several years and even lived in Hawaii for three years while working at the Gemini Observatory.

“While this is, we believe, a great accomplishment, our abilities are going to get better,” said Song. “I think it’s entirely possible that we may find that blue dot out there in space in 20 years or so. And when we do, it will be amazing.”

The work is supported principally by grants from NASA.

##



Top of Page


Today is Monday, November 23, 2009 08:28 AM EST

UGA Today is produced by the UGA News Service, a unit of UGA Public Affairs.
Hodgson Oil Building, Suite 200N
286 Oconee Street
Athens, GA  30602-1999
Phone 706/542-8083 • Fax 706/542-3939
Questions, comments and suggestions should be directed to news@uga.edu


UGA Home | External Affairs | Columns | Georgia Magazine
Publications / UGA Identity Materials | Broadcast and Video | Photographic Services
UGA Athletics | UGA Events | Visitors Center | Admissions | Directories | Search