Fichier d’origine(Fichier SVG, nominalement de 660 × 726 pixels, taille : 6 kio)

Ce fichier et sa description proviennent de Wikimedia Commons.

 
W3C-validity not checked.

Description

Description
English: Summary

SVG image of the Gliese 581 system orbits. The orbital parameters are taken from Mayor et al. (2009), arXiv:0906.2780v1 [astro-ph.EP] "Title: The HARPS search for southern extra-solar planets XVIII. An Earth-mass planet in the GJ 581 planetary system", table 2. The semimajor axes have been rederived using Kepler's Third Law and a central stellar mass of 0.31 solar masses, as the values in the table are given to 1 significant figure only for the innermost 3 planets. The description element in the SVG's source code gives further information.

Assumptions:

  1. It is assumed that the system is coplanar. This cannot be constrained by the radial velocity observations used to detect the planets in this system, but our solar system's planets are nearly coplanar, and both the systems of PSR B1257+12 (planets B and C) and Epsilon Eridani (planet b and the circumstellar disk) are coplanar, see Konacki and Wolszczan (2003), The Astrophysical Journal 591, L147–L150 "Masses and Orbital Inclinations of Planets in the PSR B1257+12 System" and Beust et al. (2006), The Astrophysical Journal 132, 2206–2218 "The Extrasolar Planet ɛ Eridani b: Orbit and Mass respectively, so this assumption is at least reasonable.
  2. The direction of rotation around the star is assumed to be the same for each planet. Again, this cannot be constrained by the current radial velocity observations, but is a reasonable assumption since this is true for the major planets in our own solar system, and is predicted by current theories of planet formation. Under these first two assumptions, the orientation of the orbits relative to each other is correct as depicted in this diagram, however their actual orientation in 3D space with respect to external reference points (e.g. the Sun, the galactic centre) is unknown, hence such directions are not indicated on the diagram.
  3. A further assumption is that the true masses of the planets are small compared to that of the star. If the masses were comparable to that of the star, the actual semimajor axis corresponding to the measured orbital period would be greater. This assumption is supported both by probability (the chance that we are observing a system which has sufficiently low inclination for this to be relevant is very low) and by dynamical stability arguments which indicate that the planets cannot have true masses much more than 1.6 times their minimum masses (Mayor et al., 2009). This effect can therefore safely be neglected.

Interpreting the diagram

The planetary orbits are drawn in orthographic projection, as viewed from directly above the plane of the system so that the orbital direction is anticlockwise. The dashed lines are drawn between the star and the periastron point of each planet, in order to depict the relative orientation of the orbits with respect to each other. The position of each planet in its orbit is calculated using the time of periastron in the table in the Mayor et al. (2009) paper, and are drawn at a time chosen to be close to the start of the Udry et al. (2007) radial velocity observations, which are available here. This time is chosen to minimise the effects of both uncertainties in the orbital parameters and potential orbital evolution of the system.

While the orbits are drawn to the correct scale, the star and the planets themselves are not shown to scale as they would be too small to see on the scale of this diagram. In addition, the true radii of the planets themselves are currently unknown as no direct observation of the planets has yet been made.
Date
Source Travail personnel
Auteur Icalanise
Autres versions

Conditions d’utilisation

Public domain Moi, propriétaire des droits d’auteur sur cette œuvre, la place dans le domaine public. Ceci s'applique dans le monde entier.
Dans certains pays, ceci peut ne pas être possible ; dans ce cas :
J’accorde à toute personne le droit d’utiliser cette œuvre dans n’importe quel but, sans aucune condition, sauf celles requises par la loi.

Légendes

Ajoutez en une ligne la description de ce que représente ce fichier

Éléments décrits dans ce fichier

dépeint

Historique du fichier

Cliquer sur une date et heure pour voir le fichier tel qu'il était à ce moment-là.

Date et heureVignetteDimensionsUtilisateurCommentaire
actuel6 novembre 2010 à 17:13Vignette pour la version du 6 novembre 2010 à 17:13660 × 726 (6 kio)IcalaniseAdded direction arrows and data
12 octobre 2010 à 23:43Vignette pour la version du 12 octobre 2010 à 23:43640 × 768 (5 kio)IcalaniseReverted to version as of 21:29, 17 June 2009: existence of planets f and g is controversial
1 octobre 2010 à 01:06Vignette pour la version du 1 octobre 2010 à 01:06640 × 768 (3 kio)IcalaniseUpdate to 6-planet circular orbit solution. The orbit of planet f is too large to appear on this scale.
30 septembre 2010 à 07:16Vignette pour la version du 30 septembre 2010 à 07:16640 × 768 (5 kio)TomruenAdd planet g as circular orbit, 0.14 AU
17 juin 2009 à 23:29Vignette pour la version du 17 juin 2009 à 23:29640 × 768 (5 kio)IcalaniseAdded orbit of planet "e" and revised orbit of "d"
30 octobre 2008 à 16:11Vignette pour la version du 30 octobre 2008 à 16:11640 × 640 (5 kio)IcalaniseHide grid behind info text
5 octobre 2008 à 16:08Vignette pour la version du 5 octobre 2008 à 16:08640 × 640 (5 kio)Icalanisefix font size bug
5 octobre 2008 à 15:43Vignette pour la version du 5 octobre 2008 à 15:43640 × 640 (5 kio)Icalanise{{Information |Description={{en|1=SVG image of the Gliese 581 system. The orbital parameters are taken from Udry et al. (2007), A&A 469, L43-L47 "The HARPS search for southern extra-solar planets XI. Super-Earths (5 and 8 M_⊕) in a 3-planet system" and

Les 3 pages suivantes utilisent ce fichier :

Usage global du fichier

Les autres wikis suivants utilisent ce fichier :

Métadonnées