Confirmation of Earth-Mass Planets Orbiting the Millisecond Pulsar PSR B1257+12
Abstract
The discovery of two Earth-mass planets orbiting an old (~10^9 years), rapidly spinning neutron star, the 6.2-millisecond radio pulsar PSR B1257+12, was announced in early 1992. It was soon pointed out that the approximately 3:2 ratio of the planets' orbital periods should lead to accurately predictable and possibly measurable gravitational perturbations of their orbits. The unambiguous detection of this effect, after 3 years of systematic timing observations of PSR B1257+12 with the 305-meter Arecibo radiotelescope, as well as the discovery of another, moon-mass object in orbit around the pulsar, constitutes irrefutable evidence that the first planetary system around a star other than the sun has been identified.
- Publication:
-
Science
- Pub Date:
- April 1994
- DOI:
- 10.1126/science.264.5158.538
- Bibcode:
- 1994Sci...264..538W
- Keywords:
-
- PLANETS;
- EXTRASOLAR PLANETS;
- PLANETARY SYSTEMS;
- PULSAR;
- MASS;
- SIZE;
- EARTH-BASED OBSERVATIONS;
- RADIO METHODS;
- GRAVITY EFFECTS;
- PERTURBATION;
- ORBIT;
- PARAMETERS;
- NUMERICAL METHODS;
- MODEL;
- PERIODICITY;
- ANALYSIS;
- COMPUTER METHODS;
- DYNAMICS;
- EQUATION OF MOTION;
- OSCILLATION;
- PERIOD;
- ORBITAL ELEMENTS;
- RESONANCE;
- THEORETICAL STUDIES;
- ORIGIN;
- FORMATION;
- Planets