HD 153950 b explained

HD 153950 b / Trimobe
Discoverer:Moutou et al.
Discovery Site:La Silla Observatory
Discovered:October 26, 2008
Discovery Method:Doppler spectroscopy
(HARPS)
Apsis:astron
Semimajor:1.28±
Eccentricity:0.34 ± 0.021
Period:499.4 ± 3.6 d
1.367 ± 0.010 y
Avg Speed:28.0
Time Periastron:2,454,502 ± 4.1
Arg Peri:308.2 ± 2.4

HD 153950 b, also known as Trimobe, is an extrasolar planet located approximately 162 light-years away. This planet was discovered on October 26, 2008 by Moutou et al. using the HARPS spectrograph on ESO's 3.6 meter telescope installed at La Silla Observatory in Atacama desert, Chile.

The planet HD 153950 b is named Trimobe. The name was selected in the NameExoWorlds campaign by Madagascar, during the 100th anniversary of the IAU. Trimobe is a rich ogre from Malagasy tales.[1] [2]

Characteristics

Mass and orbit

HD 153950 b is a Jupiter-size exoplanet. The estimated minimum mass is 2.73 times the mass of Jupiter. The planet has been found to orbit its host star every 500 days at a distance of 1.28 AU, which is approximately 28% more of the mean distance between the Sun and the Earth. HD 153950 b has a mildly elliptical orbit, given its orbital eccentricity of 0.34.

Temperature

The temperature of the exoplanet is likely to vary during its orbit, temperatures would likely range from NaNK as it approaches its periastron/apastron of its orbit. This would also likely apply to a potentially habitable hypothetical moon orbiting the gas giant exoplanet (see below).

Host star

See main article: HD 153950. HD 153950 is an F-type star with a mass that is 1.13 times the mass of the Sun and a size that is 1.34 times the radius of the Sun. In other words, it is slightly more massive and slightly larger than the Sun is. With an effective temperature of 6076 K, HD 205739 is also hotter than the Sun, although it is younger, at an estimated age of 4.3 billion years, 250–300 million years younger than the Sun.[3] The star is almost the same as the Sun in terms of metal; its measured metallicity is [Fe/H] = -0.01. HD 153950 cannot be seen from Earth with the naked eye because the star has an apparent magnitude (V) of 7.39.

Habitability

HD 153950 b is located within the habitable zone of its star. The exoplanet, with a mass of 2.73, is too massive to be rocky, and because of this the planet itself is not expected to habitable. However, based on a probable 10−4 fraction of the planet mass as a satellite,[4] it may have a large enough moon with a sufficient atmosphere and pressure, and liquid water at its surface, potentially making it habitable.[5] On the other hand, this mass can be distributed into many small satellites as well.

Discovery

HD 153950's designation is from the Henry Draper catalogue. The star was also observed by Hipparcos, which released its catalogue in 1997. The observations that led to the discovery of the planet HD 153950 b started when the N2K Consortium started an extended search for planets around 300 stars not usually targeted by Doppler spectroscopy surveys. In the case of HD 153950, the star was observed using telescopes at the La Silla Observatory in Chile.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Approved names. NameExoworlds. en. 2020-01-02.
  2. Web site: International Astronomical Union IAU. www.iau.org. 2020-01-02.
  3. Web site: Notes for star HD 153950 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081222153148/http://exoplanet.eu/star.php?st=HD+153950 . dead . December 22, 2008 . Jean Schneider . 2007 . . 25 June 2016.
  4. [Robin Canup|Canup R.M.]
  5. Web site: The Habitable Exoplanets Catalog: Data of Potential Habitable Worlds . 2013-06-23 . 2017-12-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171201032102/http://phl.upr.edu/projects/habitable-exoplanets-catalog/data . dead .