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New Planet-Hunting Technique Turns Up Oddball Solar System

Astronomers used astrometry to discover a gas giant planet orbiting a small red dwarf star, expanding our search for distant worlds.

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Planet-hunters have yet another tool to use in their quest to discover distant worlds that could harbor life. A group of astronomers has discovered a gas giant with six times the mass of Jupiter orbiting a small, weak red dwarf star by means of a method called astrometry. It's the first time researchers have spotted an exoplanet with this technique, which they say could be useful for finding a different type of planet than those detected by tried and true methods.

Most of the 300-plus known extrasolar planets have been found by tracking changes in a star's light output over time. The most prolific approach, the radial velocity method, looks for shifts in that light caused by the Doppler effect as the tug of an orbiting planet pulls the star nearer and more distant to us along our line of sight. The other approach, the transit method, tracks the periodic ...

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