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File:HD209458.jpg
HD 209458 (center)

HD 209458 is a star with an orbiting exoplanet in the constellation Pegasus. It has an apparent visual magnitude of 7.65<ref name=Anderson_Francis_2012/> and an absolute magnitude of 4.28.<ref name="mazeh"/> Because it is located at a distance of Template:Convert from the Sun as measured via parallax, it is not visible to the unaided eye. With good binoculars or a small telescope it should be easily detectable. The system is drifting closer with a heliocentric radial velocity of −14.8 km/s.<ref name="GaiaDR3"/>

The spectrum of HD 209458 presents as a late F- or early G-type main-sequence star with a stellar classification of F9 V<ref name=Gray_et_al_2001/> or G0 V,<ref name="Charbonneau2000"/> respectively. It is roughly 3.5<ref name="Del Burgo2016"/> billion years old and is spinning with a projected rotational velocity of 4.2 km/s.<ref name="Bonomo2017"/> The star displays a moderate amount of magnetic activity in its chromosphere.<ref name=Ben-Jaffel_2007/> It has a 15% greater mass than the Sun and a 20% larger radius. The abundance of iron, a measure of the metallicity of the star, is solar.<ref name="Del Burgo2016"/> HD 209458 is radiating 1.8 times the luminosity of the Sun from its photosphere at an effective temperature of 6,071 K.<ref name="Del Burgo2016"/>

Because the planet transits the star, the star is dimmed by about 2% every 3.5 days making it an extrinsic variable. The variable star designation for HD 209458 is V376 Pegasi. It is the prototype of the variable class "EP" in the General Catalogue of Variable Stars, defined as stars showing eclipses by their planets.<ref name="gcvs"/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Planetary systemEdit

File:V376PegLightCurve.png
A light curve of planet HD 209458 b transiting the star, adapted from Brown et al. (2001)<ref name="BrownHST"/>

In 1999, two teams working independently (one team consisted of astronomers at the Geneva Observatory, the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian, and the Wise Observatory; the second group was the California and Carnegie Planet Search team) discovered an extrasolar planet orbiting the star by using the radial velocity planet search method. Soon after the discovery, separate teams led by David Charbonneau and Gregory W. Henry were able to detect a transit of the planet across the surface of the star making it the first known transiting extrasolar planet.<ref name="Charbonneau2000"/><ref name="Keck"/> The planet received the designation HD 209458 b.

The planet is now under even more public scrutiny with the announcement that its atmosphere contains water vapor. Astronomers had made careful photometric measurements of several stars known to be orbited by planets, in the hope that they might observe a dip in brightness caused by the transit of the planet across the star's face. This would require the planet's orbit to be inclined such that it would pass between the Earth and the star, and previously no transits had been detected.

Travis Barman at Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona analyzed the emission spectrum of this planet in 2007, and believes that its atmosphere contains water vapor,<ref name="Barman2007"/> although previous research in 2007<ref name="Richardson2007"/> suggests that the atmosphere is composed mostly of silicate clouds. A spectrum taken in 2020 detected either sodium or titanium oxide in the planet's atmosphere.<ref name="Santos2020"/> A later study in 2021 did not find any molecular absorption features in the planetary atmosphere at all.<ref name="Casasayas-Barris2021"/>

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See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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