Astronomy Tonight

"The Jupiter That Shouldn't Exist: 51 Pegasi b's Revolutionary Discovery"


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This is your Astronomy Tonight podcast.
On June 15th, 1992, something truly remarkable happened in the cosmos that would reshape our understanding of planetary systems forever. Astronomers discovered the first exoplanet orbiting a Sun-like star, and it wasn't where anyone expected to find it.
The planet, named 51 Pegasi b, was discovered by Swiss astronomers Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz using the Doppler spectroscopy method at the Haute-Provence Observatory in southern France. Now, here's where it gets really interesting. This wasn't just any discovery—it was completely mind-bending because 51 Pegasi b is a gas giant, similar in mass to Jupiter, but it orbits incredibly close to its parent star. We're talking about a distance so near that the planet completes its orbit in just over four days. Imagine if Jupiter suddenly decided to abandon its leisurely twelve-year journey around our Sun and instead whizzed around it every few days. That's essentially what was happening around 51 Pegasi.
Before this discovery, astronomers had predicted that planetary systems would resemble our own Solar System, with small rocky planets near the star and massive gas giants lurking in the outer regions. But 51 Pegasi b shattered that assumption like a comet through a greenhouse. The discovery opened the floodgates, and within just a few years, hundreds of exoplanets were identified, many with similarly surprising orbital characteristics. Today, we've found thousands of worlds orbiting distant stars, and we owe much of that revolutionary progress to the groundbreaking work that happened on this date in 1992.
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Astronomy TonightBy Inception Point AI