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You are here: Science South West > News centre > 2010 > March > Exeter astronomer wins award

Exeter astronomer wins internationals award for planet discovery

A discovery by a team including a scientist from the University of Exeter has won the 2009 Newcomb Cleveland Prize of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).

Dr Jenny Patience of the University of Exeter was part of an international team that captured the first-ever image of multiple planets orbiting a star other than our own.

The Association’s oldest prize, now supported by Affymetrix, the Newcomb Cleveland Prize annually recognises the author or authors of an outstanding paper published in the Research Articles or Reports sections of the leading academic journal Science between June and the following May.

Dr Patience and her colleagues were awarded the $25,000 prize at an event held at the meeting of the AAAS in San Diego, California, on 20 February.

The research team was led by Dr Christian Marois of the National Research Council of Canada’s Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics (Victoria, BC, Canada). While researchers typically infer a planet’s presence indirectly through its influence on the host star or an intervening star, this team imaged three planets directly using two of the largest telescopes in the world, the Gemini North and Keck telescopes on Mauna Kea in Hawaii.

The star, HR 8799, is 128 light years from Earth. It is a ‘main sequence star', similar to the Sun in that it is in the prime of its life, fuelled by nuclear reactions within its core, with a mass 1.5 times greater than the Sun.

The system resembles a scaled-up version of the three giant planets in our solar system, according to the authors, with planets more massive and orbiting around the star at larger distances than the corresponding solar system planets.

Dr Jenny Patience of the Astrophysics Group in the University of Exeter's School of Engineering, Mathematics and Physical Sciences, said: “We’ve been trying to capture images of extrasolar planets around stars for many years so it was incredibly exciting to capture pictures of three at once.

“This was a key step in the journey towards understanding what is out there, beyond our own solar system. I’m delighted that our discovery has been recognised through this prestigious award.”

The University of Exeter has one of the UK’s largest astrophysics groups working in the fields of star formation and exoplanet research. The group focuses on one of the most fundamental problems in modern astronomy – when do stars and planets form and how does it happen? They conduct observations with the world’s leading telescopes and carry out numerical simulations to study young stars, their planet-forming discs, and exoplanets. This research helps to put our Sun and the solar system into context and understand the variety of stars and planetary systems that exist in our Galaxy. Over the next three years, the University is investing £80 million in five areas of interdisciplinary scientific research, one of which is Extrasolar Planets.

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