Exoplanet Data Explorer
Type of site | Astronomy |
---|---|
Created by | Jason T. Wright, Geoff Marcy, and the California Planet Survey consortium. Website design and maintenance by Onsi Fakhouri |
URL | http://exoplanets.org |
Current status | Inactive |
The Exoplanet Data Explorer / Exoplanet Orbit Database is a database listing extrasolar planets up to 24 Jupiter masses.[1][2]
Overview
- "We have retained the generous upper mass limit of 24 Jupiter masses in our definition of a “planet”, for the same reasons as in the Catalog: at the moment, any mass limit is arbitrary and will serve little practical function both because of the sin i ambiguity in radial velocity masses and because of the lack of physical motivation.
- The 13 Jupiter-mass distinction by the IAU Working Group is physically unmotivated for planets with rocky cores, and observationally problematic due to the sin i ambiguity. A useful theoretical and rhetorical distinction is to segregate brown dwarfs from planets by their formation mechanism, but such a distinction is of little utility observationally."[1]
The database was updated to include new exoplanets and possible exoplanets, using data from other archives such as the Astrophysics Data System, arXiv and the NASA Exoplanet Archive.[3] The database stopped being updated in mid-2018 and is no longer actively maintained.[4]
See also
- Extrasolar Planets Encyclopaedia
- NASA Exoplanet Archive
References
- ^ a b The Exoplanet Orbit Database, Jason T Wright, Onsi Fakhouri, Geoffrey W. Marcy, Eunkyu Han, Ying Feng, John Asher Johnson, Andrew W. Howard, Jeff A. Valenti, Jay Anderson, Nikolai Piskunov
- ^ Catalog of Nearby Exoplanets, R. P. Butler, J. T. Wright, G. W. Marcy, D. A Fischer, S. S. Vogt, C. G. Tinney, H. R. A. Jones, B. D. Carter, J. A. Johnson, C. McCarthy, A. J. Penny, The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 646, Number 1, 2006
- ^ Feng, Ying; Han, E.; Fakhouri, O.; Ford, E.B. (January 2013). "New Features of the Exoplanet Orbit Database at Exoplanets.org". American Astronomical Society. Bibcode:2013AAS...22134003F – via ResearchGate.
- ^ "Exoplanet Orbit Database | Exoplanet Data Explorer". Archived from the original on 13 May 2023. Retrieved 17 May 2023.
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- t
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Exoplanets
- Planet
- Definition
- Planetary science
- Exoplanet
- Exoplanet orbital and physical parameters
- Methods of detecting exoplanets
- Planetary system
- Planet-hosting stars
and
types
and
evolution
- Accretion
- Accretion disk
- Asteroid belt
- Circumplanetary disk
- Circumstellar disc
- Circumstellar envelope
- Cosmic dust
- Debris disk
- Detached object
- Disrupted planet
- Excretion disk
- Exozodiacal dust
- Extraterrestrial materials
- Extraterrestrial sample curation
- Giant-impact hypothesis
- Gravitational collapse
- Hills cloud
- Internal structure
- Interplanetary dust cloud
- Interplanetary medium
- Interplanetary space
- Interstellar cloud
- Interstellar dust
- Interstellar medium
- Interstellar space
- Kuiper belt
- List of interstellar and circumstellar molecules
- Merging stars
- Molecular cloud
- Nebular hypothesis
- Oort cloud
- Outer space
- Planetary migration
- Planetary system
- Planetesimal
- Planet formation
- Protoplanetary disk
- Ring system
- Rubble pile
- Sample-return mission
- Scattered disc
- Star formation
- Astrobiology
- Astrooceanography
- Circumstellar habitable zone
- Earth analog
- Extraterrestrial liquid water
- Galactic habitable zone
- Habitability of binary star systems
- Habitability of F-type main-sequence star systems
- Habitability of K-type main-sequence star systems
- Habitability of natural satellites
- Habitability of neutron star systems
- Habitability of red dwarf systems
- Habitability of yellow dwarf systems
- Habitable zone for complex life
- List of potentially habitable exoplanets
- Tholin
- Superhabitable planet
- Exoplanetary systems
- Exoplanets
- Discoveries
- Extremes
- Firsts
- Nearest
- Largest
- Heaviest
- Terrestrial candidates
- Kepler
- 1–500
- 501–1000
- 1001–1500
- 1501–2000
- K2
- Potentially habitable
- Proper names
- Carl Sagan Institute
- Exoplanet naming convention
- Exoplanet phase curves
- Exoplanetary Circumstellar Environments and Disk Explorer
- Extragalactic planet
- Extrasolar planets in fiction
- Geodynamics of terrestrial exoplanets
- Neptunian desert
- Nexus for Exoplanet System Science
- Planets in globular clusters
- Small planet radius gap
- Sudarsky's gas giant classification