Copyright © Michael Richmond.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Investigating exoplanet databases
Let's look at several of the big databases you can find on-line.
Each site has a big database of information, plus tools
which can allow you to make lists and tables,
or graphs and pictures.
Can you do the following? Which site(s) are best for
answering each question?
- Make a graph showing the locations of
exoplanets in the sky,
- using RA/Dec coordinates;
see
- using galactic coordinates
see
- using ecliptic coordinates;
see
Can you draw any conclusions from the locations?
Perhaps the graph of discoveries in ecliptic coordinates
should give you a clue about
the new mode of operation for Kepler K2.
Bonus! Can you make a graph using the
Hammer-Aitoff projection,
like this one?
- What type of stars do these exoplanets orbit?
Does the method of discovery favor some types
over others?
- Choose only stars which were discovered by
the transit technique. Make a histogram of the
stellar spectral type for these stars.
- Choose only stars which were discovered by
the radial velocity technique. Make a histogram of the
stellar spectral type for these stars.
- Is there a difference between these two sets of host stars?
- Just what does the "spectral type" in these tables mean?
- Consider the parallax measurements for each exoplanet's host star.
- What fraction of host stars do NOT have a good
measurement of parallax?
- Split up the exoplanets into those discovered
before 2009 and after 2009.
Is the fraction with parallax measurements
the same? Explain.
- Has anyone written a Master's or Ph.D. thesis on the topic
of moons around exoplanets?
- When and where should you go to find meetings
about exoplanet atmospheres?
- You really want to visit Iceland.
Can you find a good excuse to spend your advisor's grant money?
- Believe it or not, it's going to be clear tonight!
You decide to observe an exoplanet transit.
- Will any transits by known exoplanets take place
tonight, as seen from Tokyo?
- How many (if any) will provide a full transit,
from start to finish, at airmass less than 2.0
and visible while the Sun is below the horizon?
Bonus! Your friend at NAOJ helps you to use the small
telescope at the Mitaka campus. How big
is this telescope? Which transit(s)
could it detect?
- You receive an E-mail from your eccentric uncle.
"Hey," it reads, "I've been looking at this star,
and I think it may have a planet passing in front
of it. Could you check it, please?
The first column is time in days, and the second
column is counts."
Attached to the E-mail is
an ASCII text file with numbers.
- Make a plot showing flux as a function of time.
- Does this star show transits? If so, what is the period?
Bonus! Make a phased light curve.
For more information
- Looking for a paper in the technical literature?
Copyright © Michael Richmond.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.