Spotting Extrasolar Saturns
There are two ways that astronomers find exoplanets: they either measure the subtle back-and-forth (radial velocity) wobble that a large planet induces in its parent star, or they watch as the star's light periodically dims when a planet transits the stellar disk. The radial-velocity method gives a good orbit but leaves some uncertainty about the planet's mass. The transit method tells less about the orbit, nothing about the planet's mass, and requires a nearly perfect line of sight orientation between us, the planet, and the orbiting star. In exchange, transits reveal the planet's diameter.
NASA's Kepler mission, scheduled to launch in October 2007, is being built to spot planets all the way down to Earth-size by the transit method. And according to Jason Barnes (University of Arizona), in its quest for terrestrial planets, it should spot some ringed gems as well.
Barnes and his collaborator, Jonathan Fortney (University of Arizona) modeled what a ringed-planet transit should look like. They found that as the ring first crosses the stellar disk, the star appears slightly brighter due to the forward scattering of light from ring particles still off the star's edge. Hidden in the brightening is information about the size of the particles making up the ring. "As the planet moves across the disk, you can see the interior of the rings," adds Barnes. "You see the blockage of the ring and then the blockage of the planet."
Barnes modeled the phenomenon with a Jupiter-size body girdled by a 1.5-to-2 Jupiter-radius ring. However, he notes, many different size ring systems ought to be found. If our solar system is any indication, ringed planets are common. Each of the solar system's gas giants has rings Saturn's are simply the widest and most visible.
Spotting an extrasolar Saturn could happen even before Kepler goes online. The most famous transiting planet, HD 209458b, showed no evidence of a ring in a very precise light curve of a transit taken with the Hubble Space Telescope. Says Barnes, "Hubble could have seen a ring in the HD 209458 transit had it been there."





