Astronomers Find Three Exoplanets In Old Hubble Images
The Bad Astronomer writes "Using new software techniques on Hubble data from 1998, astronomers have teased out direct images of three planets orbiting the Sun-like star HR 8799, 130 light years away. These planets were discovered in 2008 using a different telescope, but had been sitting in the Hubble pictures this whole time, invisible due to their proximity to the bright star. Many other images of other stars are available, so it's entirely possible more planets will be found in this way."
How does that help?
Planets are just hard to find or astronomers think they are rare phenomena in the universe?
What I don't get is why every time somebody finds a planet, it makes the front page.
We know there are many stars. We know that many stars have orbiting planets.
Unless there's something special about a particular planet, I don't care.
I think the new camera on the 4S made it possible to image planets directly.
I wish they would have discussed the software and algorithms a bit more than "subtracting the star's light". Oh well.
The unprocessed image looks like it would make a great explosion sprite for a 16-bit era game.
"Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
I'm happy to keep pointing out the ludicrous nature of the exo-word as long as marketeers keep using it.
If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
As any climate skeptic will tell you, mathematical models can't prove anything, so they're going to have to go and bring the planets here before they're proven to exist.
No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?