APOD - Exoplanet Zoo: Other Stars (joli planétaire)

La taille et couleur hypothétique de ce qu'on croit en voir depuis les satellites de plein d'exoplanètes qui tourn(e|ai)ent autour de lointaines étoiles.

Do other stars have planets like our Sun? Surely they do, and evidence includes slight star wobbles created by the gravity of orbiting exoplanets and slight star dimmings caused by orbiting planets moving in front. In all, there have now been over 5,500 exoplanets discovered, including thousands by NASA's space-based Kepler and TESS missions, and over 100 by ESO's ground-based HARPS instrument. Featured here is an illustrated guess as to what some of these exoplanets might look like. Neptune-type planets occupy the middle and are colored blue because of blue-scattering atmospheric methane they might contain. On the sides of the illustration, Jupiter-type planets are shown, colored tan and red from the scatterings of atmospheric gases that likely include small amounts of carbon. Interspersed are many Earth-type rocky planets of many colors. As more exoplanets are discovered and investigated, humanity is developing a better understanding of how common Earth-like planets are, and how common life might be in the universe.

Exoplanet Zoo: Other Stars

Do other stars have planets like our Sun?
apod.nasa.gov

Illustration Credit & Copyright: Martin Vargic, Halcyon Maps

En plus grand peut être téléchargée là: THE ZOO OF EXOPLANETS @halcyonmaps.com, à droite sur le lien "SEE THE INFOGRAPHIC IN A HIGHER RESOLUTION HERE!"

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