
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
[AUDIO: exoplanet sonification]
That sound represents the first confirmed exoplanets — planets that orbit stars other than the Sun. At the end of 1992, only two such planets were known — orbiting the dead heart of an exploded star. The first planets orbiting a star similar to the Sun were announced in 1995.
By last spring, the number had passed 5,000, with thousands more possible planets awaiting confirmation. NASA put together an audio track as a timeline of all the discoveries. Each note represents a confirmed planet, with the pitch representing the planet’s distance from its star.
The pace of discovery really picked up in 2009, with the launch of the planet-hunting Kepler space telescope. It found thousands of planets that astronomers have confirmed with additional observations, and thousands more that they’re still trying to lock down. And although Kepler shut down five years ago, it still accounts for a majority of the planets discovered to date.
A successor, known as TESS, has discovered hundreds more, and is still scanning the skies. So are other telescopes in space and on the ground — adding to the “music of the spheres” — exoplanet style.
Script by Damond Benningfield
Support McDonald Observatory
4.6
247247 ratings
[AUDIO: exoplanet sonification]
That sound represents the first confirmed exoplanets — planets that orbit stars other than the Sun. At the end of 1992, only two such planets were known — orbiting the dead heart of an exploded star. The first planets orbiting a star similar to the Sun were announced in 1995.
By last spring, the number had passed 5,000, with thousands more possible planets awaiting confirmation. NASA put together an audio track as a timeline of all the discoveries. Each note represents a confirmed planet, with the pitch representing the planet’s distance from its star.
The pace of discovery really picked up in 2009, with the launch of the planet-hunting Kepler space telescope. It found thousands of planets that astronomers have confirmed with additional observations, and thousands more that they’re still trying to lock down. And although Kepler shut down five years ago, it still accounts for a majority of the planets discovered to date.
A successor, known as TESS, has discovered hundreds more, and is still scanning the skies. So are other telescopes in space and on the ground — adding to the “music of the spheres” — exoplanet style.
Script by Damond Benningfield
Support McDonald Observatory
6,097 Listeners
937 Listeners
1,190 Listeners
1,341 Listeners
810 Listeners
43,929 Listeners
2,865 Listeners
336 Listeners
14,100 Listeners
540 Listeners
221 Listeners
318 Listeners
1,129 Listeners
135 Listeners
49 Listeners