Last
year a paper in the Astrophysical Journal announced the discovery of
two super-Earths orbiting a low metallicity Sun-like star known as
HD41248. This was kind of a big deal, because it demonstrated that low
metallicity stars could have rocky planets. Most of the known
exoplanets are around higher metallicity stars. The two planets were
discovered by observing the radial motion of the star (it motion toward
or away from us) as measured by the Doppler shift of the starlight. Now a
new paper in Astronomy and Astrophysics demonstrates that the planets
likely don’t exist.
So how is it that a planet can be discovered
one year and lost the next? It all has to do with the complexities of
the observations. Exoplanets are not discovered by actually observing
them directly. Of the hundreds of known exoplanets, only a few large
ones have been directly imaged. The rest have been discovered by their
effect on the star they orbit, either by passing in front of the star
causing it to dim slightly (transit method) or by measuring the wobble
of the star as it is gravitationally pulled by the planet (radial
velocity measure).
Of these two main methods, the transit method
tends to be more reliable, but it only works if the planet passes in
front of the star from our vantage point. The radial velocity method
can work regardless of the orientation of a planet’s orbit, but it has
much more noise in the data. That’s because the wobble of a star due to
a planet is quite small, and with all the noise in the data you can
sometimes get a false positive.
To measure the radial motion of
the star, we measure the Doppler shift of the light emitted from the
star. This light comes from the photosphere of the star. As the star
wobbles toward and away from us, so does the photosphere of course, so
by measuring this Doppler shift we can measure the motion of the star.
But photosphere can have motion independent of the motion of the star.
Stellar activity such as starspots and flares can cause the photosphere
to swell or shrink slightly, and that produces a Doppler shift as well.
Distinguishing between these different motions is a difficult
challenge.
The original paper found signals of two planets, one
with a period of 25 days, and the other with a period of 18 days. Of
these two signals, the 25 day period was the strongest. The result was
based upon 62 radial velocity measurements from the HARPS spectrograph,
which is public data. Since then, more observations were made. The new
paper looked at 162 new measurements, and from these determined that
the 25 day period correlates with the rotational period of the star.
The 18 day period wasn’t clear in the new data. So it seems that what
looked like planets is instead stellar activity.
Just to be
clear, the false positives of the first paper shouldn’t be viewed as a
failure. The results presented were well analyzed given the data at
hand. What this new paper shows is that the stellar activity of HD41248
is more complex than originally supposed. This activity, combined with
its differential rotation results in Doppler motion data that looks
very similar to planetary influence. This is cutting edge work, and as
we do it we’re learning about where we need to be careful in our
analysis.
Sometimes science is about making mistakes so we can learn from them.
Image: NASA
Paper:
J. S. Jenkins et al. Two Super-Earths Orbiting the Solar Analog HD
41248 on the Edge of a 7:5 Mean Motion Resonance. ApJ 771 41. (2013)
doi:10.1088/0004-637X/771/1/41
Paper: N.C. Santos, et al.
The HARPS search for southern extra-solar planets XXXV. The interesting
case of HD41248: stellar activity, no planets? arXiv:1404.6135
[astro-ph.EP] (2014)
Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976?Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. Unless you are in this field of investigative journalism, especially covering extremely sensitive subjects and potentially dangerous subjects as well, you simply cannot understand the complexities and difficulties involved with this work that I face every day.
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