Exoplanet Expeditions: Discovering the Cosmic Diversity Beyond Our Solar System
Space Nuts: Exploring the CosmosMay 29, 2026
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Exoplanet Expeditions: Discovering the Cosmic Diversity Beyond Our Solar System

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Exoplanets: The Cosmic Neighbours We Never Knew In this special episode of Space Nuts, hosts Andrew Dunkley and Professor Jonti Horner delve into the fascinating world of exoplanets. With over 6,200 confirmed exoplanets and counting, the duo explores the diversity and complexity of these distant worlds, challenging our assumptions about planetary systems beyond our own.
Episode Highlights:
The Birth of Exoplanet Discovery: Andrew and Jonty reflect on the first confirmed exoplanets in the early 1990s and how our understanding of planetary systems has evolved since then. From the initial excitement to the current reality of thousands of discoveries, they discuss the implications of these findings.
Planetary Diversity: The hosts highlight the remarkable variety of exoplanets, including hot Jupiters, super-Earths, and even pulsar planets. They explore how these discoveries have shattered the notion that our solar system is typical, revealing a vast array of planetary types and characteristics.
Methods of Discovery: Andrew and Jonty explain the different techniques used to find exoplanets, including the radial velocity and transit methods. They discuss the technological advancements that have made these discoveries possible and the role of amateur astronomers in the search for new worlds.
Future Prospects: The conversation shifts to the future of exoplanet research, with a focus on upcoming missions like the Nancy Chris Roman Telescope and the Gaia satellite. The hosts speculate on the potential for discovering Earth-like planets and the ongoing quest to find life beyond our planet.
Philosophical Implications: Andrew and Jonty ponder the profound questions surrounding the existence of life in the universe, considering the statistical likelihood of life on other planets given the vast number of stars and planets in the cosmos.

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- Introduction to Exoplanets
- The Evolution of Exoplanet Discovery
- The Diversity of Exoplanets
- Techniques for Discovering New Worlds
- The Future of Exoplanet Research
- Philosophical Implications of Life Beyond Earth


00:00:00 --> 00:00:00 Jonti Horner: Hi there.

00:00:00 --> 00:00:02 Andrew Dunkley: Thanks for joining us yet again. This is

00:00:02 --> 00:00:05 Space Nuts. My name is Andrew Dunkley. Great

00:00:05 --> 00:00:08 to have your company one more time. Well,

00:00:08 --> 00:00:09 hopefully it's more than one more time, but

00:00:09 --> 00:00:12 on this occasion, uh, now with Fred Watson

00:00:12 --> 00:00:15 away, uh, we are doing a series of

00:00:15 --> 00:00:17 little specials and today the focus

00:00:18 --> 00:00:20 will be on exoplanets.

00:00:20 --> 00:00:23 We've known about them since the early 90s

00:00:24 --> 00:00:26 and since then we have found

00:00:27 --> 00:00:30 thousands of them. But what is there to

00:00:30 --> 00:00:32 know? I mean, we've got our own planets.

00:00:32 --> 00:00:34 Surely that just means everything else around

00:00:34 --> 00:00:37 the galaxy is the same. That's

00:00:37 --> 00:00:40 probably not true. And we're going to talk

00:00:40 --> 00:00:42 about all of it today on this, uh, episode of

00:00:42 --> 00:00:45 space nuts. 15 seconds. Guidance is

00:00:45 --> 00:00:48 internal. 10, 9,

00:00:48 --> 00:00:50 ignition sequence.

00:00:50 --> 00:00:52 Jonti Horner: Star. Space nuts. 5, 4, 3, 2.

00:00:52 --> 00:00:55 Andrew Dunkley: 1. 2, 3, 4, 5, 5, 4, 3,

00:00:55 --> 00:00:58 2, 1. Space nuts. Astronauts report

00:00:58 --> 00:01:01 at and with us while

00:01:01 --> 00:01:04 Fred Watson is away is Jonty Horner,

00:01:04 --> 00:01:06 professor of astrophysics at the University

00:01:06 --> 00:01:08 of Southern Queensland. Hi, Jonty.

00:01:08 --> 00:01:09 Jonti Horner: Good afternoon. How are you going?

00:01:09 --> 00:01:11 Andrew Dunkley: I am quite well. And you?

00:01:11 --> 00:01:13 Jonti Horner: I can't complain. I'm enjoying us having a

00:01:13 --> 00:01:15 public holiday today, which is great. I mean,

00:01:15 --> 00:01:17 I'm still off anyway, so it doesn't really

00:01:17 --> 00:01:19 matter, but it means I'm taking one day's

00:01:19 --> 00:01:21 less of sick leave, I guess. Uh, well, it's

00:01:21 --> 00:01:21 all good.

00:01:22 --> 00:01:25 Andrew Dunkley: I'm retired, so public holidays mean nothing

00:01:25 --> 00:01:28 to me now. I

00:01:28 --> 00:01:30 used to so look forward to having a few days

00:01:30 --> 00:01:32 off or, you know, an extra long weekend if

00:01:32 --> 00:01:35 they combined the two in April because we

00:01:35 --> 00:01:37 get, uh, east sometimes, get Easter and Anzac

00:01:37 --> 00:01:40 Day in April. And if, um, you jam them

00:01:40 --> 00:01:43 together, you get a nice free holiday. But,

00:01:43 --> 00:01:45 uh, it doesn't mean squat to me anymore.

00:01:45 --> 00:01:47 Jonti Horner: I keep finding it bizarre. At least in

00:01:47 --> 00:01:49 Toowoomba. I'm sure this is reproduced

00:01:49 --> 00:01:51 everywhere. If the shop shut for one day, the

00:01:51 --> 00:01:54 day after is absolutely feral. So

00:01:54 --> 00:01:56 last week we had Anzac Day, which tells you

00:01:56 --> 00:01:58 how long ago these were recorded, by the way.

00:01:58 --> 00:02:01 Um, but yeah, last week we had Anzac Day. And

00:02:01 --> 00:02:03 obviously, Franz, act quite rightly, the

00:02:03 --> 00:02:04 shops, the supermarkets and everything are

00:02:04 --> 00:02:06 shut. It's one of the biggest holidays in

00:02:06 --> 00:02:09 Australia of the lot of them. But we, we tend

00:02:09 --> 00:02:11 to do our shopping on a Sunday anyway, so it

00:02:11 --> 00:02:13 didn't really matter. Went to the shops on

00:02:13 --> 00:02:14 the Sunday and it was almost people fighting

00:02:14 --> 00:02:16 in the aisles because heaven forfend that one

00:02:16 --> 00:02:18 day you don't, you know, you don't get food

00:02:18 --> 00:02:21 for one day and the shops start running empty

00:02:21 --> 00:02:24 of bread. And it's like people buy more when

00:02:24 --> 00:02:25 they've had one day without the Shops being

00:02:25 --> 00:02:27 open, very, very strange phenomenon.

00:02:28 --> 00:02:30 Andrew Dunkley: They panic by and there's no toilet paper on

00:02:30 --> 00:02:31 the shelves. Is also.

00:02:32 --> 00:02:34 Jonti Horner: Well, the best thing about that. That led us

00:02:34 --> 00:02:37 to subscribing to who Gives a Crap which

00:02:37 --> 00:02:40 panel started online.

00:02:40 --> 00:02:42 Um, and they've been brilliant. We've

00:02:42 --> 00:02:44 recommended them to everyone because it works

00:02:44 --> 00:02:45 out cheaper than getting it from the

00:02:45 --> 00:02:47 supermarket and they're better quality. I

00:02:47 --> 00:02:49 mean it's, it feels like very much a no, uh,

00:02:49 --> 00:02:51 brainer. And we'd never have come across them

00:02:51 --> 00:02:54 if it wasn't for Covid and the

00:02:54 --> 00:02:56 incredibly smart people of Toowoomba going,

00:02:56 --> 00:02:58 oh my God, Covid's happening. We're going to

00:02:58 --> 00:03:00 run out of toilet paper. Of all the things

00:03:00 --> 00:03:02 for the shop to run out of, happened

00:03:02 --> 00:03:05 everywhere. Why toilet paper? Uh,

00:03:05 --> 00:03:08 I mean Covid affect my

00:03:08 --> 00:03:11 memory was that Covid was a, was something

00:03:11 --> 00:03:12 that made things come out of your head, not

00:03:12 --> 00:03:14 things that came out anywhere else. It's not

00:03:14 --> 00:03:15 like there will be an expectation it would

00:03:15 --> 00:03:18 make you use more. No, bread was

00:03:18 --> 00:03:20 fine, eggs were fine, perishables were fine.

00:03:20 --> 00:03:23 But toilet paper, I don't understand.

00:03:24 --> 00:03:26 Andrew Dunkley: I never, I never got it either. But uh, uh,

00:03:26 --> 00:03:28 our shelves were devoid of the stuff.

00:03:29 --> 00:03:30 We better get down to business.

00:03:30 --> 00:03:33 We're talking exoplanets today.

00:03:33 --> 00:03:35 And I did a little bit of research. Uh, the

00:03:35 --> 00:03:38 first exoplanets were confirmed in

00:03:38 --> 00:03:41 1992. In fact, they suspected they existed

00:03:41 --> 00:03:43 before that, but they couldn't prove it. But

00:03:43 --> 00:03:45 1992, uh, they

00:03:45 --> 00:03:48 found two planets that were later named

00:03:48 --> 00:03:51 Poltergeist and um, Phobitor

00:03:52 --> 00:03:55 Phoebe. Uh, so they were

00:03:55 --> 00:03:58 officially the first two exoplanets. And then

00:03:58 --> 00:04:01 the first one that was

00:04:01 --> 00:04:03 orbiting a sun like star was found in

00:04:03 --> 00:04:05 1995. That was

00:04:06 --> 00:04:08 um, 51 Pegasi B.

00:04:08 --> 00:04:08 Jonti Horner: Yes.

00:04:09 --> 00:04:11 Andrew Dunkley: So, uh, those were the first few. And of

00:04:11 --> 00:04:14 course now we've reached a point where

00:04:14 --> 00:04:16 as at 30

00:04:17 --> 00:04:19 April 2026,

00:04:19 --> 00:04:22 6278 confirmed

00:04:22 --> 00:04:24 exoplanets with another 8000

00:04:25 --> 00:04:28 waiting to be, um, officially

00:04:28 --> 00:04:31 catalogued. I suppose. So we've

00:04:31 --> 00:04:33 found a lot of them. And the other thing

00:04:33 --> 00:04:36 we've been discovering about, um, finding

00:04:36 --> 00:04:38 these things is how very different

00:04:39 --> 00:04:42 a lot of solar systems are and how very

00:04:42 --> 00:04:44 different some of the planets are. Ah,

00:04:46 --> 00:04:49 what we always thought was basically the

00:04:49 --> 00:04:51 standard for solar systems,

00:04:51 --> 00:04:54 which was ours. Doesn't appear to be very

00:04:54 --> 00:04:55 standard at all.

00:04:56 --> 00:04:58 Jonti Horner: No, it's an incredible time to live through.

00:04:58 --> 00:05:00 I think the way I always budge this is we've

00:05:00 --> 00:05:03 lived through one of the great scientific

00:05:03 --> 00:05:05 revolutions almost without noticing it.

00:05:05 --> 00:05:08 And I think it sheds A light into how people

00:05:08 --> 00:05:09 would have reacted in previous scientific

00:05:09 --> 00:05:11 revolutions, which is that when it's

00:05:11 --> 00:05:13 happening in your lifetime, it just happens.

00:05:13 --> 00:05:15 So we look back and think that was such a

00:05:15 --> 00:05:17 fundamental change. And at the time it was

00:05:17 --> 00:05:19 just Tuesday, you know. And

00:05:19 --> 00:05:22 yes, it's like that with exoplanets. I

00:05:22 --> 00:05:25 grew up in a world where one of the big

00:05:25 --> 00:05:27 science questions was, is a solar system

00:05:27 --> 00:05:29 unique? Are there planets around other stars?

00:05:29 --> 00:05:32 Or are we alone? And there were good

00:05:32 --> 00:05:34 reasons for some people to suspect that we

00:05:34 --> 00:05:36 might be the only planetary system in the

00:05:36 --> 00:05:38 universe. There were kind of, at that time,

00:05:38 --> 00:05:40 two broadly competing models of planet

00:05:40 --> 00:05:42 formation that could both explain the solar

00:05:42 --> 00:05:45 system as we see it to a fair degree. And one

00:05:45 --> 00:05:48 was what's almost described as the

00:05:48 --> 00:05:51 Laplace model, the disc model, which is now

00:05:51 --> 00:05:53 what we favour, that has developed a lot

00:05:53 --> 00:05:55 since then. But the other was this idea that

00:05:55 --> 00:05:57 you had a close encounter between the sun and

00:05:57 --> 00:06:00 a protostar. Ah, that was close enough that

00:06:00 --> 00:06:02 the two stars almost collided and a tongue of

00:06:02 --> 00:06:04 material was pulled out of the sun, which

00:06:04 --> 00:06:05 went on to condense from the planets. And

00:06:05 --> 00:06:07 that was championed by people like Martin

00:06:07 --> 00:06:09 Wolfson of York University, among others.

00:06:10 --> 00:06:12 At, uh, this time we're talking in the late

00:06:12 --> 00:06:15 80s, it was kind of widely held that, uh,

00:06:15 --> 00:06:18 Wolfson's suggestion had problems.

00:06:18 --> 00:06:21 It was probably not the right solution, but

00:06:21 --> 00:06:23 it potentially could be. We'd found a few

00:06:23 --> 00:06:25 debris discs, debris around stars, a bit like

00:06:25 --> 00:06:27 the asteroid belt around the sun, but much

00:06:27 --> 00:06:30 more massive in the early 80s. And that

00:06:30 --> 00:06:33 was kind of hinting that planets could be

00:06:33 --> 00:06:36 common, that the disc model could be the one.

00:06:36 --> 00:06:38 But at the time I was growing up, and at the

00:06:38 --> 00:06:40 time, going into the early 90s, you have

00:06:40 --> 00:06:42 these two models of planet formation that

00:06:42 --> 00:06:45 predicted vastly different outcomes. If

00:06:45 --> 00:06:47 the disc model was right, planets would be

00:06:47 --> 00:06:49 ubiquitous, planets would just be the

00:06:49 --> 00:06:51 leftovers from star formation, and

00:06:51 --> 00:06:53 effectively every star would have planets or

00:06:53 --> 00:06:56 close to it. If the encounter

00:06:56 --> 00:06:58 model was right, then planetary systems would

00:06:58 --> 00:07:01 be exceedingly rare, because to get two stars

00:07:01 --> 00:07:03 to come sufficiently close together at just

00:07:03 --> 00:07:05 the right speed for that to draw a tongue out

00:07:05 --> 00:07:08 and form a planetary system is vanishingly

00:07:08 --> 00:07:11 unlikely. So that was arguing that we were

00:07:11 --> 00:07:14 effectively the result of a freak encounter.

00:07:14 --> 00:07:17 And if that prediction was right, then if

00:07:17 --> 00:07:18 that method was right, sorry, it would

00:07:18 --> 00:07:20 predict that planetary systems were

00:07:20 --> 00:07:22 exceedingly rare and that we wouldn't find

00:07:22 --> 00:07:25 them. So going into the 90s, you had these

00:07:25 --> 00:07:27 two theories that could both explain in broad

00:07:27 --> 00:07:30 brushstrokes, what we see at home, but that

00:07:30 --> 00:07:31 predicted very, very, very different

00:07:31 --> 00:07:34 outcomes. And as I say, The Wolfson idea was

00:07:34 --> 00:07:37 already losing a bit of seam. But in the time

00:07:37 --> 00:07:40 since we found that planets are under the

00:07:40 --> 00:07:41 stars and, um, that they are ubiquitous,

00:07:41 --> 00:07:43 basically every star you see in the night

00:07:43 --> 00:07:46 sky, no matter how complex system, no

00:07:46 --> 00:07:48 matter what's that, there are going to be

00:07:48 --> 00:07:50 planetary objects around it, pretty much all

00:07:50 --> 00:07:53 cases. And that's a death knell, of course,

00:07:53 --> 00:07:55 for the Wolfson model of freak planetary

00:07:55 --> 00:07:58 system formation and its support for the

00:07:58 --> 00:08:00 model we now know and love, which has been

00:08:00 --> 00:08:02 refined over the years because of all the

00:08:02 --> 00:08:04 oddities we found. Now, it's really

00:08:04 --> 00:08:06 interesting, storey, but it goes way back

00:08:06 --> 00:08:08 before that. We've got a long history of

00:08:09 --> 00:08:11 the things that led to finding the first

00:08:11 --> 00:08:13 planets. What we take it a bit for granted

00:08:13 --> 00:08:15 now. We're finding so many planets and I have

00:08:15 --> 00:08:17 the good fortune of getting to be involved

00:08:17 --> 00:08:19 peripherally in some of the discoveries. I'

00:08:19 --> 00:08:21 have the very entertaining job of killing

00:08:21 --> 00:08:23 some planetary systems. So it should be said

00:08:23 --> 00:08:25 that the number you gave at the start can go

00:08:25 --> 00:08:28 down as well as going up. Some of

00:08:28 --> 00:08:30 the planets that get confirmed later on get

00:08:30 --> 00:08:32 redacted, get killed. And I've probably,

00:08:32 --> 00:08:35 certainly as lead author, I've never led a

00:08:35 --> 00:08:36 planet discovery, but I've been involved with

00:08:36 --> 00:08:38 them. But I've led a number of research

00:08:38 --> 00:08:40 projects that killed planets that other

00:08:40 --> 00:08:42 people claimed. So I've probably been net

00:08:42 --> 00:08:44 responsible as an individual for a negative

00:08:44 --> 00:08:47 number of planet discoveries that can happen.

00:08:47 --> 00:08:49 But it's really important that we do that

00:08:49 --> 00:08:50 kind of work. I've always been really

00:08:50 --> 00:08:52 passionate about that because all of the

00:08:52 --> 00:08:55 things that we do to talk about how common

00:08:55 --> 00:08:58 planets are, to look into how they form and,

00:08:58 --> 00:09:00 um, further down the line to try and find

00:09:00 --> 00:09:02 planets that could be like the Earth and to

00:09:02 --> 00:09:04 try and look for life on them. All of that is

00:09:04 --> 00:09:06 based on the catalogue of the known. What do

00:09:06 --> 00:09:09 we know? What's the variety? And so if you've

00:09:09 --> 00:09:11 got planets that are in that catalogue that

00:09:11 --> 00:09:13 don't exist, they're polluting that catalogue

00:09:13 --> 00:09:15 and confusing and obscuring the truth. So

00:09:15 --> 00:09:18 it's really important to not just accept that

00:09:18 --> 00:09:20 when a planet is claimed and marked as

00:09:20 --> 00:09:22 confirmed, that's the end of the storey. But

00:09:22 --> 00:09:23 we need to follow it up and say, does it make

00:09:23 --> 00:09:25 sense? Could there be something else going

00:09:25 --> 00:09:27 on? And in those cases we do learn more about

00:09:27 --> 00:09:30 it. So it's a fascinating field. I'm really

00:09:30 --> 00:09:32 fortunate to have gone from being a kid who

00:09:32 --> 00:09:34 wondered to an adult who gets to be involved

00:09:34 --> 00:09:36 in the process. That's incredibly

00:09:36 --> 00:09:39 wonderful for me, but it's a fabulous Storey

00:09:39 --> 00:09:41 we have lived through a great scientific

00:09:41 --> 00:09:44 revolution in many ways. One that's as big as

00:09:44 --> 00:09:46 the acceptance of continental drift or uh,

00:09:47 --> 00:09:49 the origin of species and Darwin or general

00:09:49 --> 00:09:52 relativity and Einstein. It's one of those

00:09:52 --> 00:09:53 revolutions. And when you talk about the

00:09:53 --> 00:09:56 other ones, you think about how epochal

00:09:56 --> 00:09:58 and incredible and how they change the world

00:09:58 --> 00:10:00 and we've just lived through one. Um, it's

00:10:00 --> 00:10:01 amazing.

00:10:01 --> 00:10:03 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah, it's incredible. And, and

00:10:04 --> 00:10:06 will it never end? I mean the thought of

00:10:06 --> 00:10:08 looking up into the night sky and seeing

00:10:09 --> 00:10:12 billions of stars and knowing that there

00:10:12 --> 00:10:15 are probably multi, billions of planets is

00:10:15 --> 00:10:17 just, it's mind blowing.

00:10:17 --> 00:10:19 Jonti Horner: And the rest, I mean to me it's a numbers

00:10:19 --> 00:10:20 game and we talk about this when we talk

00:10:20 --> 00:10:23 about life elsewhere, but the numbers get

00:10:23 --> 00:10:26 ridiculous really, really quickly. Now we've

00:10:26 --> 00:10:28 been heavily biassing what we found to

00:10:28 --> 00:10:30 finding planets closer to their stars than

00:10:30 --> 00:10:31 the Earth is to the sun. The overwhelming

00:10:31 --> 00:10:33 majority of planets. We found a very close

00:10:33 --> 00:10:36 end, but there will be planets further out as

00:10:36 --> 00:10:37 well. You're not going to have a situation

00:10:37 --> 00:10:39 very often where you've got a few planets

00:10:39 --> 00:10:41 near the star and nothing further out. So a

00:10:41 --> 00:10:43 lot of the very tentative estimates you get

00:10:43 --> 00:10:46 of the number of planets in the universe say,

00:10:46 --> 00:10:48 well, imagine there's just one planet per I.

00:10:48 --> 00:10:50 Based on what we found so far, I think it's

00:10:50 --> 00:10:52 fairer to say there are probably nearer to 10

00:10:52 --> 00:10:54 planets per star. And depending on whether

00:10:55 --> 00:10:58 Jared Isaacson, the guy who's taken

00:10:58 --> 00:11:00 over NASA who is not an astronomer, gets his

00:11:00 --> 00:11:02 way and restores Pluto. If he restores

00:11:02 --> 00:11:05 Pluto, then you have to argue that Ceres,

00:11:05 --> 00:11:07 Makemake, Haumea, Eris, all these other

00:11:07 --> 00:11:09 things are planets in the solar system. You

00:11:09 --> 00:11:12 could have 20 planets in the solar system. So

00:11:12 --> 00:11:15 let's assume 10 per star. You

00:11:15 --> 00:11:17 know whether Pluto is arisen. Leave that for

00:11:17 --> 00:11:19 aside. I have strong opinions on that. Other

00:11:19 --> 00:11:20 opinions are available. They're wrong, but

00:11:20 --> 00:11:22 they're available. As Matt come out always

00:11:22 --> 00:11:25 says, um, ignoring

00:11:25 --> 00:11:27 that though, if you assume 10 planets per

00:11:27 --> 00:11:28 star, because it's going to be nearer to 10

00:11:28 --> 00:11:30 than when an astronomer's working factors of

00:11:30 --> 00:11:33 10. In our galaxy alone, um, we have

00:11:34 --> 00:11:37 somewhere around 400 million

00:11:37 --> 00:11:39 stars. Now that number also is only accurate

00:11:39 --> 00:11:41 to a factor of 2 or 3. So it could be 200, it

00:11:41 --> 00:11:44 could be 600, but call it 400

00:11:44 --> 00:11:46 million stars means 10 planets per star.

00:11:46 --> 00:11:49 You'd have 4 trillion planets in our

00:11:49 --> 00:11:51 galaxy, ignoring the free floating ones that

00:11:51 --> 00:11:54 don't have a star to call their own. 4

00:11:54 --> 00:11:55 trillion planets in our galaxy.

00:11:56 --> 00:11:58 There are more galaxies in the observable

00:11:58 --> 00:12:01 universe than there are stars in our galaxy

00:12:01 --> 00:12:03 by orders of magnitude. Which means you start

00:12:03 --> 00:12:05 getting to the point which, in the observable

00:12:05 --> 00:12:08 universe alone, um, ignoring the part of the

00:12:08 --> 00:12:09 universe that we can't see because that's

00:12:09 --> 00:12:11 utterly unquantifiable, but just in the part

00:12:11 --> 00:12:14 we can see, you'll have planets numbered in

00:12:14 --> 00:12:16 the sextillions of septillions.

00:12:17 --> 00:12:19 So a trillion is 10 to the 12, a trillion is

00:12:19 --> 00:12:22 a thousand billion, a quadrillion is 10 to

00:12:22 --> 00:12:25 the 15, which is a thousand trillion, and so

00:12:25 --> 00:12:28 on. So these numbers are utterly,

00:12:28 --> 00:12:31 astonishingly, overwhelmingly, mind boggling.

00:12:31 --> 00:12:33 And that's where I come to with this thing,

00:12:33 --> 00:12:35 that if we're the only place with life in the

00:12:35 --> 00:12:37 universe, then there's something very unusual

00:12:37 --> 00:12:37 going on.

00:12:38 --> 00:12:41 Andrew Dunkley: Absolutely, yeah. Um, and

00:12:41 --> 00:12:44 it was the movie Contact where they said, uh,

00:12:44 --> 00:12:47 space is really big. So if it's just stuff,

00:12:47 --> 00:12:49 just us, it seems like an awful waste of

00:12:49 --> 00:12:49 space.

00:12:50 --> 00:12:50 Jonti Horner: It is.

00:12:51 --> 00:12:52 Andrew Dunkley: I always like that line.

00:12:52 --> 00:12:54 Jonti Horner: Yeah, well, the question of life elsewhere is

00:12:54 --> 00:12:56 one that really polarises people. I mean,

00:12:56 --> 00:12:58 everybody's interested to know the answer.

00:12:58 --> 00:13:00 Arthur C Clarke said something along the

00:13:00 --> 00:13:02 lines of, there are two possibilities. Either

00:13:02 --> 00:13:04 we're alone in the universe or we are not.

00:13:04 --> 00:13:07 Both equally terrifying. Um,

00:13:08 --> 00:13:10 a lot of people. Stephen Hawking was very

00:13:10 --> 00:13:11 adamantly, we shouldn't try and contact

00:13:11 --> 00:13:13 aliens because they will kill us in the face.

00:13:14 --> 00:13:16 I don't tend to agree with them, but

00:13:17 --> 00:13:19 it is one of those discussions that really

00:13:19 --> 00:13:22 fires people up, gets people energised. And

00:13:22 --> 00:13:24 for me, it would be actually far more

00:13:24 --> 00:13:26 terrifying to know we're alone in the

00:13:26 --> 00:13:27 universe, because that means life is such an

00:13:27 --> 00:13:30 impossible fluke that given planets

00:13:30 --> 00:13:33 numbering in the sextillions or septillions,

00:13:33 --> 00:13:35 in the known universe, we're the only one

00:13:35 --> 00:13:38 with life. Which means that only one planet

00:13:38 --> 00:13:41 in 10 followed by 20 zeros or more

00:13:41 --> 00:13:43 gets life on it. And that seems infeasible to

00:13:43 --> 00:13:46 me, but m. We won't really know until

00:13:47 --> 00:13:50 we move forward and we actually proceed with

00:13:50 --> 00:13:51 the search for life elsewhere. And as I've

00:13:51 --> 00:13:54 said in a previous episode, absence of

00:13:54 --> 00:13:56 evidence is not evidence of absence. So if we

00:13:56 --> 00:13:58 find life, then we'll know we're not alone.

00:13:58 --> 00:14:00 We'll know that life's common in the

00:14:00 --> 00:14:02 universe. The longer it takes us to find life

00:14:03 --> 00:14:05 doesn't mean that there is nothing to be

00:14:05 --> 00:14:08 found, it just means that life is scarcer,

00:14:08 --> 00:14:10 basically. So the longer we take to find it,

00:14:10 --> 00:14:12 the better we'll get at doing it. The further

00:14:12 --> 00:14:14 we'll be able to look, the more planets we

00:14:14 --> 00:14:16 can Sample. And that will then give us a

00:14:16 --> 00:14:18 handle for the commonality of life.

00:14:18 --> 00:14:18 Andrew Dunkley: Life.

00:14:18 --> 00:14:20 Jonti Horner: So we find life in our lifetime. All well and

00:14:20 --> 00:14:22 good. If we're still looking in a thousand

00:14:22 --> 00:14:25 years. I'd be gobsmacked, but that just tells

00:14:25 --> 00:14:26 you life is a lot rarer than we thought.

00:14:27 --> 00:14:30 Andrew Dunkley: Indeed. And we will talk about that more in

00:14:30 --> 00:14:32 another, uh, special episode when we do part

00:14:32 --> 00:14:35 two of Astrobiology. Uh, we kind

00:14:35 --> 00:14:38 of had, we didn't have enough time to

00:14:38 --> 00:14:39 talk about it last time, so we're going to do

00:14:39 --> 00:14:40 a part two.

00:14:40 --> 00:14:42 Jonti Horner: But uh, I can talk too much.

00:14:43 --> 00:14:45 Andrew Dunkley: It's also an area that um, uh, makes

00:14:45 --> 00:14:48 your brain hurt. So we, we decided to,

00:14:49 --> 00:14:51 you know, give it a miss this week and go

00:14:51 --> 00:14:52 back, uh, next week.

00:14:53 --> 00:14:56 Um, so where do you want to go with this?

00:14:56 --> 00:14:58 Like, um, everyone knows there's

00:14:58 --> 00:15:01 exoplanets. Everyone knows there are, um, you

00:15:01 --> 00:15:03 know, powder puff planets. And um,

00:15:04 --> 00:15:06 they've actually got names for them. I've got

00:15:07 --> 00:15:10 named, um. So you know, we can

00:15:10 --> 00:15:13 officially say that uh, as far as

00:15:13 --> 00:15:14 planets are concerned, we have

00:15:15 --> 00:15:17 um, specific types of

00:15:17 --> 00:15:19 planets in our solar system, and that is

00:15:20 --> 00:15:22 rocky planets, gas giants, and

00:15:23 --> 00:15:25 for want of a better term, ice giants. But in

00:15:25 --> 00:15:28 the exoplanet world there are

00:15:28 --> 00:15:31 several other types. Um,

00:15:31 --> 00:15:34 you've got um, uh, Neptunian,

00:15:34 --> 00:15:37 like planets, super Earths, uh, you've

00:15:37 --> 00:15:40 got uh, hot Jupiters, you've got super cold

00:15:40 --> 00:15:42 worlds, you've got pulsar planets, and

00:15:42 --> 00:15:44 there's even uh, uh,

00:15:44 --> 00:15:47 circumbinary planets where they're

00:15:47 --> 00:15:49 orbiting two stars. We don't have that

00:15:49 --> 00:15:51 thankfully. Uh, that could be messy,

00:15:51 --> 00:15:53 especially when it comes to trying to predict

00:15:53 --> 00:15:56 the tides. But um, it's, you know, there's so

00:15:56 --> 00:15:58 much more going on out there.

00:15:58 --> 00:16:00 Jonti Horner: There is, and it reflects something that's

00:16:00 --> 00:16:03 incredibly human. And it again goes back to

00:16:03 --> 00:16:06 that discussion about Pluto and many other

00:16:06 --> 00:16:08 things in human experience. What we find

00:16:09 --> 00:16:11 in every field of study, but you know, in

00:16:11 --> 00:16:14 astronomy in particular, is you have a

00:16:14 --> 00:16:16 continuum of things you've got from the very

00:16:16 --> 00:16:18 small to the very big with no obvious sharp

00:16:18 --> 00:16:21 gaps. You know, you'll find everything in

00:16:21 --> 00:16:23 planetary systems from stuff the size of a

00:16:23 --> 00:16:25 grain of dust to things more massive than the

00:16:25 --> 00:16:27 sun, depending on the planetary system you're

00:16:27 --> 00:16:30 in. What we tend to do as humans is we tend

00:16:30 --> 00:16:33 to break down that which we

00:16:33 --> 00:16:36 see as a continuum into manageable bite sized

00:16:36 --> 00:16:38 chunks by grouping like with like in order

00:16:38 --> 00:16:41 that we can then better study objects.

00:16:42 --> 00:16:44 And so for example, you'd say that the Earth

00:16:44 --> 00:16:46 is more like Venus or Mars than it is Like

00:16:46 --> 00:16:47 Jupiter. So you categorise them into

00:16:47 --> 00:16:50 different subgroups. For humans, we do this

00:16:50 --> 00:16:53 all around the world. You've got babies and

00:16:53 --> 00:16:55 toddlers, children, teenagers, adults,

00:16:55 --> 00:16:58 retirees, pensioners, and you set boundaries.

00:16:58 --> 00:17:00 And those boundaries don't always agree from

00:17:00 --> 00:17:02 country to country. You know, you remember

00:17:02 --> 00:17:04 the incredible day that you suddenly wake up

00:17:04 --> 00:17:06 and you're able to drive legally when the day

00:17:06 --> 00:17:08 before you weren't. And fundamentally you'

00:17:08 --> 00:17:11 changed as a human. You're one day older out

00:17:11 --> 00:17:14 of what, you know, several thousand days at

00:17:14 --> 00:17:16 that point, about 5, 6 days. But

00:17:16 --> 00:17:18 miraculously you've crossed this arbitrary

00:17:18 --> 00:17:21 threshold which we've put there to separate

00:17:21 --> 00:17:23 people who can't drive and people who can but

00:17:23 --> 00:17:25 maybe shouldn't. You know, that's kind of

00:17:25 --> 00:17:26 where the division is.

00:17:28 --> 00:17:29 We do this as humans all the time to

00:17:29 --> 00:17:32 categorise things. And that's kind of where

00:17:32 --> 00:17:34 Pluto fallafal and it's where all these

00:17:34 --> 00:17:36 groups of different types of planets come

00:17:36 --> 00:17:37 from. You've got hot Jupiters and warm

00:17:37 --> 00:17:40 Jupiters, super puff planets and all

00:17:40 --> 00:17:43 sorts of quirky things. And those terms

00:17:43 --> 00:17:46 are taking the broad spectrum of planets that

00:17:46 --> 00:17:48 we've got and trying to group apples with

00:17:48 --> 00:17:50 apples and oranges with oranges, things that

00:17:50 --> 00:17:53 are similar to one another. And the diversity

00:17:53 --> 00:17:55 just continues to ascend, as every time we

00:17:55 --> 00:17:57 think we've found the most extreme of

00:17:57 --> 00:17:58 whatever, we find something that's even more

00:17:58 --> 00:18:01 so. Like I said, we found planets who we

00:18:01 --> 00:18:04 can calculate their size by how much light of

00:18:04 --> 00:18:05 their star they block. We can calculate their

00:18:05 --> 00:18:07 mass by how much they pull their star around.

00:18:09 --> 00:18:11 We've got a subset of stars and planets where

00:18:11 --> 00:18:12 we can do both those, uh, things which lets

00:18:12 --> 00:18:15 us figure out the density. And from them we

00:18:15 --> 00:18:18 found planets that are less dense than cotton

00:18:18 --> 00:18:20 candy, which are the super puffs,

00:18:20 --> 00:18:22 fluffy ones, probably coming towards the end

00:18:22 --> 00:18:24 of their lives because they're so low density

00:18:24 --> 00:18:26 that they are probably being stripped away by

00:18:26 --> 00:18:28 their star stellar winds. We found planets

00:18:28 --> 00:18:31 that are effectively like comets with tails

00:18:31 --> 00:18:33 as their atmosphere stripped off. I mean, to

00:18:33 --> 00:18:35 some degree, actually, the planet Mercury in

00:18:35 --> 00:18:37 the solar system is a comet. It's got a

00:18:37 --> 00:18:39 beautiful long sodium tail. One of my

00:18:39 --> 00:18:42 favourite astrophotos I've ever seen is a

00:18:42 --> 00:18:44 picture of Mercury near the Pleiades, where

00:18:44 --> 00:18:46 somebody's done some imaging in a sodium

00:18:46 --> 00:18:48 filter and you can see Mercury's tail

00:18:48 --> 00:18:51 visible on the image. It's an astonishing

00:18:51 --> 00:18:53 thing. So we found planets like comets. We've

00:18:53 --> 00:18:55 even found planets around pulsars and they

00:18:55 --> 00:18:57 were the first three planets we found around

00:18:57 --> 00:19:00 other stars. There were um, Phoebe Toe,

00:19:00 --> 00:19:03 Poltergeist and Rao, these stars orbiting a

00:19:03 --> 00:19:05 pulsar named after three kinds of the, um,

00:19:05 --> 00:19:07 undead. So there's this huge variety that

00:19:07 --> 00:19:09 worth mentioning actually from the names. The

00:19:09 --> 00:19:12 names are being allocated by the

00:19:12 --> 00:19:13 International Astronomical Union, just as

00:19:13 --> 00:19:16 names of asteroids and names of satellites

00:19:16 --> 00:19:18 and things like that are. What they're trying

00:19:18 --> 00:19:20 to do with them is to be very

00:19:21 --> 00:19:24 democratic globally, to try and represent

00:19:24 --> 00:19:26 multiple cultures rather than just have all

00:19:26 --> 00:19:29 the planets draw from a single cultural base,

00:19:29 --> 00:19:31 a single kind of background. And so they've

00:19:31 --> 00:19:33 been running a series of competitions over

00:19:33 --> 00:19:36 the years for the general public where a

00:19:36 --> 00:19:39 given planetary system is to a given country.

00:19:39 --> 00:19:41 And, um, then people from that country get to

00:19:41 --> 00:19:43 nominate names, and then people from that

00:19:43 --> 00:19:46 country get to vote on it. And I think we've

00:19:46 --> 00:19:47 now got more than 100 planets named. We've

00:19:47 --> 00:19:49 had a few of them from Australia named. And

00:19:49 --> 00:19:52 I'm actually just trying to look up, um, the

00:19:52 --> 00:19:54 planet names from the iau. They're the

00:19:54 --> 00:19:56 official ones. Now, what's interesting is

00:19:56 --> 00:19:59 these are, uh, official names. They're

00:19:59 --> 00:20:01 the IAU's official names. I

00:20:01 --> 00:20:04 therefore try to use them in my purpose.

00:20:04 --> 00:20:06 Um, and I've had pushback from astronomers

00:20:06 --> 00:20:08 because everyone's so used to the catalogue

00:20:08 --> 00:20:10 numbers. So what I've been trying to do

00:20:10 --> 00:20:12 is you give both names, you give the

00:20:12 --> 00:20:14 catalogue name on the proper now. And I think

00:20:14 --> 00:20:16 where it will go long term is it'll become a

00:20:16 --> 00:20:18 bit like comets. You know, I've been trying

00:20:18 --> 00:20:20 to get images through the cloud and cursing

00:20:20 --> 00:20:22 the weather of Comet Pan Stars at the minute.

00:20:22 --> 00:20:24 And we talk about Comet Pan Stars, but it's

00:20:24 --> 00:20:26 real name that I'd write down, if I'm writing

00:20:26 --> 00:20:29 it is C20, 26 R3

00:20:29 --> 00:20:31 brackets, pan stars. And I think

00:20:32 --> 00:20:34 in the long term, I can see exoplanet names

00:20:34 --> 00:20:36 going that kind of way once people get used

00:20:36 --> 00:20:38 to it. So 51 Pegasi B,

00:20:39 --> 00:20:41 for example, is dimidium. That's the name

00:20:41 --> 00:20:44 that's been given there. And you can use both

00:20:44 --> 00:20:46 interchangeably. But because astronomers are

00:20:46 --> 00:20:49 used to 51 Pegasi B, that's where it

00:20:49 --> 00:20:51 sticks. Now, the names come from lots of

00:20:51 --> 00:20:53 different cultures. They come from lots of

00:20:53 --> 00:20:55 different groups. There are planets that have

00:20:55 --> 00:20:57 been discovered by Australians that are named

00:20:57 --> 00:20:59 after Australians. There are planets that are

00:20:59 --> 00:21:01 named after people. You know, you've got the

00:21:01 --> 00:21:03 planet Galileo going around 55 Cancri.

00:21:04 --> 00:21:06 So 55 Cancer's five named planets are all

00:21:06 --> 00:21:08 named after astronomers. You've got Galileo,

00:21:08 --> 00:21:11 Brahe, Lipper, Hay Janssen,

00:21:11 --> 00:21:13 Harriet, and, um, that's it. So Five

00:21:13 --> 00:21:16 planets, five names. Lots of different names

00:21:16 --> 00:21:19 from different cultures. We've got names that

00:21:19 --> 00:21:21 are controversial, names from different

00:21:21 --> 00:21:24 folklore, names from different cultures all

00:21:24 --> 00:21:26 around. That list is growing. But you don't

00:21:26 --> 00:21:28 say, see used all that much yet because a

00:21:28 --> 00:21:31 planet needs to be confirmed and

00:21:31 --> 00:21:34 then very confidently there and well studied

00:21:34 --> 00:21:36 for it to get onto the list for the name. So

00:21:36 --> 00:21:37 I think like I said, we've got a bit more

00:21:37 --> 00:21:39 than 100 names and a bit more than 6

00:21:39 --> 00:21:42 planets. Those 6 planets, that

00:21:42 --> 00:21:44 number will go up as well as down, but it's

00:21:44 --> 00:21:45 not going to be too long until we're 10

00:21:45 --> 00:21:46 plus.

00:21:46 --> 00:21:49 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah, I figured out why, uh, some of these,

00:21:49 --> 00:21:52 um, sometimes the number goes down. They're

00:21:52 --> 00:21:54 the ones that have been discovered by Monty

00:21:54 --> 00:21:55 Python. It's a planet.

00:21:55 --> 00:21:56 Jonti Horner: No it's not, it's not.

00:21:56 --> 00:21:59 Um, so that's why we'll also lose

00:21:59 --> 00:22:02 some with Gaia. So Gaia has been this

00:22:02 --> 00:22:04 amazing satellite measuring positions of

00:22:04 --> 00:22:07 stars and it can measure the

00:22:07 --> 00:22:10 wobble on the sky side to side of

00:22:10 --> 00:22:12 stars as a result of their planets. Now

00:22:12 --> 00:22:15 historically, the two, by far the two most

00:22:15 --> 00:22:16 successful methods of finding planets are the

00:22:16 --> 00:22:19 radial velocity method where we measure the

00:22:19 --> 00:22:21 star speed towards our away from us and see

00:22:21 --> 00:22:23 it wobbling along the line of sight, and the

00:22:23 --> 00:22:24 transit method where we see it pass between

00:22:24 --> 00:22:26 us and the star. And that means the orbit is

00:22:26 --> 00:22:28 edge on to us. And but for those radial

00:22:28 --> 00:22:30 velocity planets, we're measuring the

00:22:30 --> 00:22:32 fraction of the wobble towards or away from

00:22:32 --> 00:22:35 the observer. And um, the orbit could be

00:22:35 --> 00:22:37 tilted almost edge on or almost face on to

00:22:37 --> 00:22:39 give that same amount of wobble along our

00:22:39 --> 00:22:41 line of sight. Gaia will give us the other

00:22:41 --> 00:22:43 dimension. It'll give us a side by side,

00:22:43 --> 00:22:45 which means it'll find us the tilts of all

00:22:45 --> 00:22:48 those planets. Some of those planets will be

00:22:48 --> 00:22:51 on orbits very tilted to ours and therefore

00:22:51 --> 00:22:52 the mass that they have will be much higher

00:22:52 --> 00:22:55 than that we think they probably have. And

00:22:55 --> 00:22:56 that there'll be certain amount of attrition

00:22:56 --> 00:22:58 where planets that we think are planets are

00:22:58 --> 00:23:01 actually brown water dwarfs. And that is

00:23:01 --> 00:23:02 another of these arbitrary boundaries which

00:23:02 --> 00:23:05 we set roughly at 13 Jupiter masses. But we

00:23:05 --> 00:23:07 will have planets falling off at the top end.

00:23:08 --> 00:23:11 When Gaia comes out. I suspect he won't see

00:23:11 --> 00:23:12 the number drop though, because Gaia will

00:23:12 --> 00:23:14 also lead to so many new discoveries that,

00:23:14 --> 00:23:16 that will overwhelm the ones that fall, uh,

00:23:16 --> 00:23:17 off the top end.

00:23:18 --> 00:23:20 Andrew Dunkley: I, yes, that's a fair point. So, um,

00:23:20 --> 00:23:23 it's, it's going to be one of those waveforms

00:23:24 --> 00:23:26 that goes up and down

00:23:26 --> 00:23:29 as, as situations change. Yeah,

00:23:29 --> 00:23:31 let's take a. I was going

00:23:31 --> 00:23:33 Jonti Horner: to say I've been responsible for a number of

00:23:33 --> 00:23:35 systems getting killed because people propose

00:23:35 --> 00:23:38 planets in places that they seemed unlikely

00:23:38 --> 00:23:40 and they didn't make sense from orbital

00:23:40 --> 00:23:42 mechanics point of view. So I ran simulations

00:23:42 --> 00:23:44 and showed that if these planetary systems

00:23:44 --> 00:23:46 are real, wetting them in the last 10 years

00:23:46 --> 00:23:49 of a 4 billion year lifetime before

00:23:49 --> 00:23:50 the planets crash into each other or reject

00:23:50 --> 00:23:52 each other. And that's not feasible. So there

00:23:52 --> 00:23:53 must be something else going on. So on the

00:23:53 --> 00:23:55 one hand, hand, boohoo, you've killed a

00:23:55 --> 00:23:57 planet. That's not good, you naughty boy. Um,

00:23:57 --> 00:23:59 on the flip side though, it's really cool

00:23:59 --> 00:24:01 because there's something there creating the

00:24:01 --> 00:24:04 signal that people have measured and it

00:24:04 --> 00:24:06 isn't planets, so what is it? So there's

00:24:06 --> 00:24:08 always. Science always gives you more

00:24:08 --> 00:24:09 questions.

00:24:09 --> 00:24:12 Andrew Dunkley: Indeed it does. And you're listening to Space

00:24:12 --> 00:24:15 Nuts with Andrew Dunkley. Andrew Dunkley, I

00:24:15 --> 00:24:17 do know my name. And Professor Johnty Horner.

00:24:19 --> 00:24:21 Let's take a short break from the show to

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00:26:10 --> 00:26:11 Jonti Horner: Space Nuts.

00:26:11 --> 00:26:12 Andrew Dunkley: I'm gonna have to write it down so I can read

00:26:12 --> 00:26:13 it properly.

00:26:13 --> 00:26:16 Um, Jonty, where do you want to go next? I

00:26:16 --> 00:26:19 mean, we've found so many, uh, I don't think

00:26:19 --> 00:26:21 we will ever, never stop finding

00:26:21 --> 00:26:24 exoplanets, uh, because as

00:26:24 --> 00:26:25 technology improves they're just going to

00:26:25 --> 00:26:26 keep stacking up, aren't they?

00:26:26 --> 00:26:29 Jonti Horner: Yeah. I mean, if we talk about the 6000ish we

00:26:29 --> 00:26:32 found so far, uh, 6278

00:26:32 --> 00:26:34 I think it was. We said earlier on there are

00:26:34 --> 00:26:37 probably 4 trillion give or take in our

00:26:37 --> 00:26:40 galaxy, which means we've only found about

00:26:40 --> 00:26:43 one planet for every billion planets

00:26:43 --> 00:26:46 that are in our galaxy. We've barely

00:26:46 --> 00:26:48 scratched the surface in doing that. We've

00:26:48 --> 00:26:51 utterly revolutionised our knowledge of the,

00:26:51 --> 00:26:53 the variety of planets that'll be out there,

00:26:53 --> 00:26:56 of how planets form. We have still for

00:26:56 --> 00:26:58 me, not found something truly Earth like. I

00:26:58 --> 00:27:00 think that's the next hurdle. Now you'll see

00:27:00 --> 00:27:02 a number of media articles over the years

00:27:02 --> 00:27:04 saying the most Earth like planet yet has

00:27:04 --> 00:27:06 been found. All the bloody.

00:27:06 --> 00:27:08 Andrew Dunkley: I, I actually read an article yesterday

00:27:09 --> 00:27:12 which said, uh, oh, super Earth found

00:27:12 --> 00:27:14 potential life. Da, da, da, da, da. And I

00:27:14 --> 00:27:15 thought, yeah, here we go again. And I read

00:27:15 --> 00:27:17 it and of course when you get down to the

00:27:17 --> 00:27:19 second last paragraph, it says, of course

00:27:19 --> 00:27:21 there's no confirmation that this is even a

00:27:21 --> 00:27:21 rocky planet.

00:27:21 --> 00:27:24 Jonti Horner: But yeah, and to me it's like

00:27:24 --> 00:27:26 imagining that you're an alien visiting the

00:27:26 --> 00:27:27 Earth. Ah, and you're flying over the oceans

00:27:27 --> 00:27:29 and you say, we found the most human like

00:27:29 --> 00:27:31 animal yet. It's about two metres long, it's

00:27:31 --> 00:27:33 a couple of hundred kilos, 100 kilos. I mean,

00:27:33 --> 00:27:36 it's a dolphin, it's nothing like humans, but

00:27:36 --> 00:27:38 it, you know, it's that kind of thing. And I

00:27:38 --> 00:27:41 think I understand the urge, uh,

00:27:41 --> 00:27:44 for scientists to talk about things in the

00:27:44 --> 00:27:45 context of the habitable zone, in the

00:27:45 --> 00:27:47 purpose, because that's interesting. Is it

00:27:47 --> 00:27:50 too warm? Is it too cold? I understand the

00:27:50 --> 00:27:52 thing of saying this planet has similarities

00:27:52 --> 00:27:54 to the Earth. It's about the same size, size,

00:27:54 --> 00:27:56 or it would be about the same temperature.

00:27:56 --> 00:27:58 What tends to happen though then is that the

00:27:58 --> 00:28:00 pressure release from the universities gets a

00:28:00 --> 00:28:01 little bit more hyperbolic in it because they

00:28:01 --> 00:28:04 want to get the reads and the clicks, want to

00:28:04 --> 00:28:06 get the word out there. It then gets into the

00:28:06 --> 00:28:09 media, who again are being more hyperbolic,

00:28:09 --> 00:28:11 and we're seeing it at, ah, the minute, with

00:28:11 --> 00:28:13 the articles about the meteor shower that's

00:28:13 --> 00:28:14 active at the minute, where people are

00:28:14 --> 00:28:16 building it up and blowing it up to a level

00:28:16 --> 00:28:19 that is not practical and not observable and

00:28:19 --> 00:28:22 leads to this point. It's not helped by the

00:28:22 --> 00:28:23 fact that there are people who are making

00:28:23 --> 00:28:25 careers out of

00:28:26 --> 00:28:28 discussing how Earth like planets are that

00:28:28 --> 00:28:30 they didn't discover, that they weren't

00:28:30 --> 00:28:32 involved with to get themselves clicked and

00:28:32 --> 00:28:33 to get money. And a lot of the beautiful

00:28:33 --> 00:28:36 visuals you get cropping up online about

00:28:36 --> 00:28:38 Earth like planets come from one resource,

00:28:38 --> 00:28:40 which is called the Planetary Habitability

00:28:40 --> 00:28:43 Laboratory in Puerto Rico, which has been

00:28:43 --> 00:28:45 an ongoing source of frustration for me and

00:28:45 --> 00:28:48 colleagues because there's been storeys that

00:28:48 --> 00:28:49 people I know have published about planets.

00:28:49 --> 00:28:52 And then this entity

00:28:52 --> 00:28:54 puts out their own press release saying,

00:28:54 --> 00:28:56 we've calculated this magic number and this

00:28:56 --> 00:28:57 is the most Earth like planet found and it's

00:28:57 --> 00:28:59 probably got life. And the scientists who

00:28:59 --> 00:29:01 discovered it have said none of those things.

00:29:01 --> 00:29:04 Yeah. Um, and all the coverage is, look

00:29:04 --> 00:29:06 at this beautiful AI generated artwork. Isn't

00:29:06 --> 00:29:09 this amazing? So I do, and I

00:29:09 --> 00:29:11 had a fun storey about this a few months ago.

00:29:11 --> 00:29:13 I had a. An author get in touch with me,

00:29:13 --> 00:29:14 asking me to proofread a chapter of the book.

00:29:14 --> 00:29:16 A book, A book that they're doing. And they'd

00:29:16 --> 00:29:18 got a little bit in there about all the

00:29:18 --> 00:29:20 potentially Earth like habitable planets that

00:29:20 --> 00:29:21 have been found out there. And they use that

00:29:21 --> 00:29:24 as a resource. And I had to back them off on

00:29:24 --> 00:29:25 it and say, look, it's brilliant to talk

00:29:25 --> 00:29:27 about this. Please don't use this as a

00:29:27 --> 00:29:30 resource. If you use their equations,

00:29:30 --> 00:29:32 Venus would be the most habitable planet

00:29:32 --> 00:29:34 we've discovered other than the Earth.

00:29:35 --> 00:29:37 And I certainly wouldn't want to have a

00:29:37 --> 00:29:37 holiday there.

00:29:38 --> 00:29:41 Andrew Dunkley: No, no. Um, you'd need. Need 20

00:29:41 --> 00:29:44 gazillion plus sunscreen

00:29:44 --> 00:29:46 for starters or something like

00:29:46 --> 00:29:49 that. Now that'd be Mercury. But, um, it's.

00:29:49 --> 00:29:49 Yeah, it's.

00:29:49 --> 00:29:52 Jonti Horner: It's impossible unless it's impossible, you

00:29:52 --> 00:29:54 know, and we could live among the clouds.

00:29:54 --> 00:29:56 That'd be a bit different. But yeah, there's

00:29:56 --> 00:29:59 a lot of stuff around it. And it. We've

00:29:59 --> 00:30:01 talked before about other things. We talked

00:30:01 --> 00:30:03 about interstellar comets and the obfuscation

00:30:03 --> 00:30:04 of science when it comes to those. And

00:30:04 --> 00:30:06 they're definitely not aliens. And I'll say

00:30:06 --> 00:30:09 again, they definitely are not aliens. In

00:30:09 --> 00:30:12 this case, the exo Earth

00:30:12 --> 00:30:15 fatigue is real. People in the general public

00:30:15 --> 00:30:17 are convinced that we found planets like the

00:30:17 --> 00:30:19 Earth already. And I mean, it's great, it

00:30:19 --> 00:30:21 keeps people interested, but it also

00:30:21 --> 00:30:23 diminishes the impact when we finally do,

00:30:24 --> 00:30:25 you know, astronomers will finally find a

00:30:25 --> 00:30:27 planet that could genuinely be truly Earth.

00:30:27 --> 00:30:29 Like. We'll then need to do a lot of work to

00:30:29 --> 00:30:31 characterise it, but you can imagine in 10

00:30:31 --> 00:30:34 years time, we get data back from a planet

00:30:34 --> 00:30:37 that shows not only that it could be Earth

00:30:37 --> 00:30:38 like, but the surface temperature is right,

00:30:38 --> 00:30:39 and that there is liquid water in the

00:30:39 --> 00:30:42 atmosphere. And the scientific community will

00:30:42 --> 00:30:44 be, wow, this is our best discovery ever.

00:30:44 --> 00:30:46 This is so cool. And nobody'll care because,

00:30:46 --> 00:30:48 well, you've done it 10 times already. The

00:30:48 --> 00:30:49 media told me.

00:30:49 --> 00:30:51 Andrew Dunkley: So, yeah, I think I've found

00:30:51 --> 00:30:54 it. Um, a potentially habitable

00:30:54 --> 00:30:57 new planet has been discovered 146 light

00:30:57 --> 00:31:00 years away. Um, but then it goes.

00:31:00 --> 00:31:02 It goes on to say, but it might be minus 70

00:31:02 --> 00:31:05 degrees Celsius, um, but there's a storey

00:31:05 --> 00:31:06 like that coming out every other week.

00:31:07 --> 00:31:09 Jonti Horner: Um, and if you want to play that game, our

00:31:09 --> 00:31:11 definitions of habitability, based very much

00:31:11 --> 00:31:13 as we talked about in the previous episode,

00:31:13 --> 00:31:16 on our understanding of where

00:31:16 --> 00:31:18 Earth life could thrive and in the solar

00:31:18 --> 00:31:20 system. We've got potentially habitable

00:31:20 --> 00:31:22 worlds all over the place. Mars is

00:31:22 --> 00:31:23 potentially habitable on the borderline.

00:31:24 --> 00:31:26 Depending on what you think about bacteria in

00:31:26 --> 00:31:27 the atmosphere, Venus could be habitable for

00:31:27 --> 00:31:30 that type of life. We've got all the icy

00:31:30 --> 00:31:32 objects with buried subsurface oceans that

00:31:32 --> 00:31:34 are habitable, but not detectably habitable

00:31:34 --> 00:31:37 because there's ice in the way. I don't think

00:31:37 --> 00:31:40 it. It benefits people to overplay

00:31:40 --> 00:31:41 these discoveries, even though I fully

00:31:41 --> 00:31:44 understand the reason why people do,

00:31:45 --> 00:31:47 and I don't think it does anybody a service

00:31:47 --> 00:31:50 long term. Um, it is the unfortunate

00:31:50 --> 00:31:53 reality of what it is. But, hey,

00:31:53 --> 00:31:55 people are interested. Of course, you'll play

00:31:55 --> 00:31:57 to that in the kind of modern media cycle.

00:31:57 --> 00:31:59 Nobody remembers the retraction. They all

00:31:59 --> 00:32:01 remember the discovery. You know, everybody

00:32:01 --> 00:32:03 remembers cold fusion back from when I was a

00:32:03 --> 00:32:06 kid and a teenager. Um, that was, of course,

00:32:06 --> 00:32:07 published in the Journal of Irreproducible

00:32:07 --> 00:32:10 Results, otherwise known as Nature. Um,

00:32:10 --> 00:32:11 these things happen.

00:32:13 --> 00:32:14 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah, they do.

00:32:14 --> 00:32:16 Um, so, all right, where to next? With

00:32:17 --> 00:32:20 exoplanets, with, uh, so many

00:32:20 --> 00:32:22 discovered, um, that that's provided a

00:32:22 --> 00:32:25 baseline for the probability that every star

00:32:25 --> 00:32:28 has at least 10 planets around us.

00:32:29 --> 00:32:31 Jonti Horner: Um, we're finding them in a growing variety

00:32:31 --> 00:32:33 of ways. It's instructive a little bit to

00:32:33 --> 00:32:35 look back at history. You know, if I took you

00:32:35 --> 00:32:38 back to the early 1800s, our telescopes

00:32:38 --> 00:32:41 had finally got good enough to measure the

00:32:41 --> 00:32:43 motion of nearby stars against the background

00:32:43 --> 00:32:45 stars. Um, that allowed us to start measuring

00:32:45 --> 00:32:47 the distance to nearby stars using

00:32:47 --> 00:32:49 trigonometric parallax, where you look at a

00:32:49 --> 00:32:50 star from one side of the Earth's orbit, then

00:32:50 --> 00:32:52 the other and see it move against the

00:32:52 --> 00:32:54 background just like your finger moves if you

00:32:54 --> 00:32:56 look from one eye or the other. That same

00:32:56 --> 00:32:59 trick at ah, that time people start measuring

00:32:59 --> 00:33:01 it and they realise that nearby stars also

00:33:01 --> 00:33:04 moved through space. They were

00:33:04 --> 00:33:06 undergoing what we now know as proper motion,

00:33:06 --> 00:33:08 moving against the background stars in a

00:33:08 --> 00:33:10 straight line, which is their true space

00:33:10 --> 00:33:13 movement through the galaxy as seen by people

00:33:13 --> 00:33:15 on Earth. A guy called Friedrich

00:33:15 --> 00:33:18 Wilhelm Bessel, who was a fabulous astronomer

00:33:18 --> 00:33:20 in the early 1800s was doing

00:33:20 --> 00:33:23 observations of Sirius, which is our, uh, one

00:33:23 --> 00:33:25 of our class's star systems. It's a brightest

00:33:25 --> 00:33:28 star in the night sky and he found that once

00:33:28 --> 00:33:30 he took away the parallax Martian, the wobble

00:33:30 --> 00:33:31 left and right because of the Earth going

00:33:31 --> 00:33:34 around the sun, that Sirius was wobbling

00:33:34 --> 00:33:35 as it moved across the night sky. And it

00:33:35 --> 00:33:37 looked as though it was being pulled around

00:33:37 --> 00:33:39 by something as massive as the sun, but you

00:33:39 --> 00:33:42 could see nothing there. There obviously was

00:33:42 --> 00:33:44 something there pulling it around. It turns

00:33:44 --> 00:33:46 out that was the indirect discovery of what

00:33:46 --> 00:33:48 we now know as Sirius B, the white dwarf

00:33:48 --> 00:33:50 star. It wasn't the first white dwarf to be

00:33:50 --> 00:33:53 found, but in this case it was discovered

00:33:53 --> 00:33:55 indirectly. We saw Sirius doing something

00:33:55 --> 00:33:58 unexpected. We saw it wobbling and we used

00:33:58 --> 00:34:00 that to infer the presence of the white dwarf

00:34:00 --> 00:34:03 star around it. And of course we got another

00:34:03 --> 00:34:05 example of this a little bit later in the

00:34:05 --> 00:34:08 1800s with the discovery of Neptune, not

00:34:08 --> 00:34:10 through direct observation, but initially

00:34:10 --> 00:34:13 through mathematics, through John, um,

00:34:13 --> 00:34:15 Couch, Adams and Urban, uh, Le

00:34:15 --> 00:34:18 Verrier, doing calculations of how Uranus

00:34:18 --> 00:34:21 was moving across the sky, seeing that it was

00:34:21 --> 00:34:24 moving as though something we couldn't see

00:34:24 --> 00:34:26 was pulling on it. Predicting where that

00:34:26 --> 00:34:27 thing will be in Neptune was duly found. So

00:34:27 --> 00:34:30 they set this heritage of inferring

00:34:30 --> 00:34:32 the presence of something we cannot see

00:34:32 --> 00:34:35 because of its effect on something else. And

00:34:35 --> 00:34:38 that has been foundational to how we find

00:34:38 --> 00:34:40 planets around other stars. That's

00:34:40 --> 00:34:42 fundamentally how for more than 99% of

00:34:42 --> 00:34:45 them we've discovered them. There have been

00:34:45 --> 00:34:48 slip ups on the way in the 1940s,

00:34:48 --> 00:34:50 1950s, Edwin Vanderkamp, who's director of

00:34:50 --> 00:34:52 Spruill Observatory, thought he'd found

00:34:52 --> 00:34:54 planets around Barnard's Star, which is a

00:34:54 --> 00:34:56 star with the biggest proper motion in the

00:34:56 --> 00:34:58 sky. Turned out that he'd actually discovered

00:34:58 --> 00:35:00 the cleaner because what was happening was

00:35:00 --> 00:35:03 that his telescope was getting dirty. He used

00:35:03 --> 00:35:05 a lens telescope, a refracting telescope

00:35:06 --> 00:35:08 as the front Objective lens got

00:35:08 --> 00:35:11 Grottier the way in which it meant red light

00:35:11 --> 00:35:13 compared to blue light changed, causing

00:35:13 --> 00:35:15 Barnard's star position to shift against the

00:35:15 --> 00:35:16 background sounds. And when it got cleaned,

00:35:16 --> 00:35:19 it all went back to normal. He went very sad.

00:35:19 --> 00:35:21 But he went to his grave in the 70s convinced

00:35:22 --> 00:35:23 he was a victim of an injustice and he'd

00:35:23 --> 00:35:26 found planets around Barnassar. We now have

00:35:26 --> 00:35:27 found planets around Barnard, sir, but

00:35:27 --> 00:35:29 they're very different to the ones he

00:35:29 --> 00:35:32 proposed. We also had the fabulous

00:35:32 --> 00:35:34 Storey just prior to the pulsar planets

00:35:34 --> 00:35:36 actually being found, the same researchers

00:35:37 --> 00:35:38 thought they'd found a planet around a

00:35:38 --> 00:35:40 different pulsar and announced it at a

00:35:40 --> 00:35:42 conference. And someone went away and said a

00:35:42 --> 00:35:44 little bit, bit. Something a bit odd about

00:35:44 --> 00:35:46 this. What had been done was they were

00:35:46 --> 00:35:49 measuring the timing of the pulsars. So

00:35:49 --> 00:35:51 pulsars are super, ah, condensed

00:35:51 --> 00:35:54 neutron stars, leftovers from the explosion

00:35:54 --> 00:35:56 of star as a supernova, which have a couple

00:35:56 --> 00:35:58 of magnetic hotspots on their surface. And as

00:35:58 --> 00:36:00 they spin, they beam radio waves into space

00:36:00 --> 00:36:02 like lighthouse beams. And when the beam

00:36:02 --> 00:36:05 sweeps across as we get pulses of radio waves

00:36:05 --> 00:36:06 like the ticking of a clock.

00:36:07 --> 00:36:09 Andrew Dunkley: Yep. With this pulse, they're very, they're

00:36:09 --> 00:36:10 very precise, aren't they?

00:36:10 --> 00:36:11 Jonti Horner: Yeah, they're viewed as being the most

00:36:11 --> 00:36:13 accurate clocks in the universe, aside from

00:36:13 --> 00:36:15 when they have the old glitch or. And I've

00:36:15 --> 00:36:18 had plenty of watchers that do that in this

00:36:18 --> 00:36:20 case, uh, he was observing this pulsar and

00:36:20 --> 00:36:22 sometimes the pulses arrived a little early,

00:36:22 --> 00:36:23 sometimes they arrived a little there. And

00:36:23 --> 00:36:26 this was happening periodically, so

00:36:26 --> 00:36:28 ruled everything else out. There must be

00:36:28 --> 00:36:29 something causing the distance between the

00:36:29 --> 00:36:31 pulsar and the solar system to vary

00:36:31 --> 00:36:33 periodically though, uh, it must be a planet.

00:36:34 --> 00:36:36 Turned out that after the conference someone

00:36:36 --> 00:36:38 said, there's something a little bit odd

00:36:38 --> 00:36:39 here, maybe you should just do a double

00:36:39 --> 00:36:41 cheque before you publish it. Went away and

00:36:41 --> 00:36:43 found a single typo in their code that meant

00:36:43 --> 00:36:45 they didn't properly account for the motion

00:36:45 --> 00:36:47 of the Earth around the sun. So they had

00:36:47 --> 00:36:49 discovered a planet, but they discovered that

00:36:49 --> 00:36:50 the one that they were set on, they

00:36:50 --> 00:36:53 discovered the Earth. I mean it's a

00:36:53 --> 00:36:56 fabulous discovery. Now we laugh about this,

00:36:56 --> 00:36:58 but it shows how hard these observations are.

00:36:58 --> 00:37:00 Uh, finding planets around other stars is

00:37:01 --> 00:37:02 incredibly difficult. We've had the

00:37:02 --> 00:37:05 wherewithal to understand the methods

00:37:05 --> 00:37:07 that we would use for a couple of hundred

00:37:07 --> 00:37:10 years, but it was only in the

00:37:10 --> 00:37:13 90s it really became feasible to do them. And

00:37:13 --> 00:37:15 in those early days in particular, there were

00:37:15 --> 00:37:17 two methods that hugely

00:37:17 --> 00:37:20 dominated. For the first, probably 10

00:37:20 --> 00:37:23 years, 12 years of the exoplanet area era,

00:37:23 --> 00:37:25 the main way we found planets was what you

00:37:25 --> 00:37:27 call the radial velocity technique, the

00:37:27 --> 00:37:29 wobble technique, which is using the Doppler

00:37:29 --> 00:37:32 effect. And you see a distance star. And, um,

00:37:32 --> 00:37:33 we can measure its light and we can break

00:37:33 --> 00:37:35 that light to its component colours, seeing

00:37:35 --> 00:37:37 what we call the Fraunhofel lines littered

00:37:37 --> 00:37:39 across it, which are dark lines that are the

00:37:39 --> 00:37:41 chemical fingerprint of what the star's made

00:37:41 --> 00:37:43 of. And, um, we can measure their positions

00:37:43 --> 00:37:45 in the lab incredibly precisely. And if the

00:37:45 --> 00:37:47 star's moving towards us, its light gets a

00:37:47 --> 00:37:49 bit blue shifted and all those lines move a

00:37:49 --> 00:37:51 little bit to the blue. And if it's moving

00:37:51 --> 00:37:52 away from us, they move a little bit to the

00:37:52 --> 00:37:54 red. And if you can monitor it for long

00:37:54 --> 00:37:56 enough, you can see the star coming backward

00:37:56 --> 00:37:59 and forward, it's wobbling. You can infer the

00:37:59 --> 00:38:01 presence of something massive pulling it

00:38:01 --> 00:38:03 round. You can figure out the, the orbital

00:38:03 --> 00:38:06 distance of that object by how

00:38:06 --> 00:38:08 long it takes for the wobble. So it comes

00:38:08 --> 00:38:10 towards us, goes away, comes towards us again

00:38:10 --> 00:38:13 as it does one full lap. That gives you the

00:38:13 --> 00:38:16 orbital period. You can infer the mass based

00:38:16 --> 00:38:18 on the size of the wobble. But we're only

00:38:18 --> 00:38:19 measuring that component along our line of

00:38:19 --> 00:38:21 sight. So you get a minimum mass that it

00:38:21 --> 00:38:23 could be, and it could be higher than that.

00:38:23 --> 00:38:25 So we can learn about the orbit. That's the

00:38:25 --> 00:38:27 radial velocity technique. And that is an

00:38:27 --> 00:38:29 indirect method. You see the station wobbling

00:38:29 --> 00:38:31 and infer the presence of a planet or planets

00:38:31 --> 00:38:33 around it. The technique that's taken over

00:38:33 --> 00:38:36 from it is the transit technique. That's

00:38:36 --> 00:38:38 where a planet's going around its star and

00:38:38 --> 00:38:39 its orbits just lined up right, that every

00:38:39 --> 00:38:41 time it goes around, it blocks a bit of the

00:38:41 --> 00:38:43 star's light. The star dims and then

00:38:43 --> 00:38:45 brightens again periodically. And, um, by

00:38:45 --> 00:38:47 measuring the periodic dimming, you can infer

00:38:47 --> 00:38:49 the presence of something blocking the star's

00:38:49 --> 00:38:51 light. Again, that gives you the orbital

00:38:51 --> 00:38:54 period, because you get one dip per orbit and

00:38:54 --> 00:38:56 it gives you the size, the diameter of the

00:38:56 --> 00:38:57 planet, because a bigger planet will block,

00:38:57 --> 00:38:59 block more light. But fundamentally, again,

00:38:59 --> 00:39:02 it's an indirect method. You see a star doing

00:39:02 --> 00:39:04 something odd and infer the presence of a

00:39:04 --> 00:39:07 planet. Now, both these methods

00:39:08 --> 00:39:10 were known and were used for hundreds of

00:39:10 --> 00:39:12 years. We saw binary

00:39:12 --> 00:39:15 stars being observed because of the

00:39:15 --> 00:39:18 dimming during the eclipses. Um, John

00:39:18 --> 00:39:20 Goodrick, um, a British astronomer who died

00:39:20 --> 00:39:22 at a very young age, explained Algol. The

00:39:22 --> 00:39:24 Wink of Kingdom star has been a binary star

00:39:24 --> 00:39:27 back in the early 1700s. That is effectively

00:39:27 --> 00:39:29 the same as A transit technique, it's just

00:39:29 --> 00:39:32 you've got a bigger, uh, blocker. Problem is

00:39:32 --> 00:39:34 our eyes are only sensitive to variations in

00:39:34 --> 00:39:37 light at about the 20% level. Smaller

00:39:37 --> 00:39:38 variations than that, we just don't pick up.

00:39:38 --> 00:39:40 Your lights can be flickering by 20% and

00:39:40 --> 00:39:43 you'll barely notice it. For a binary star,

00:39:43 --> 00:39:45 the brightness can change by a factor of two

00:39:45 --> 00:39:48 or more. For an exoplanet, Jupiter,

00:39:48 --> 00:39:51 uh, blocks about 1% of the light from the sun

00:39:51 --> 00:39:53 on that is just something you cannot see with

00:39:53 --> 00:39:56 a naked eye. So to be able to use the transit

00:39:56 --> 00:39:58 technique, we had to wait for detectors that

00:39:58 --> 00:40:00 were sensitive enough to measure incredibly

00:40:00 --> 00:40:02 fine variations in brightness to come along,

00:40:02 --> 00:40:04 which is why we've only been able to use a

00:40:04 --> 00:40:07 transit technique this millennium. It wasn't

00:40:07 --> 00:40:09 really possible before that. Similarly, with

00:40:09 --> 00:40:12 the radial velocity technique, we could

00:40:12 --> 00:40:14 measure the wobble of stars from binary

00:40:14 --> 00:40:17 stars for decades. Because the movement of

00:40:17 --> 00:40:18 the lines were sufficiently big, you could

00:40:18 --> 00:40:20 measure it on a photographic plate and you

00:40:20 --> 00:40:21 could measure speeds of kilometres per

00:40:21 --> 00:40:23 second. Fairly easy.

00:40:23 --> 00:40:25 Planets like Jupiter going around the sun

00:40:25 --> 00:40:28 cause wobbles measured in metres per second,

00:40:28 --> 00:40:31 maybe 10 metres per second. That is, again,

00:40:31 --> 00:40:33 this such a small wobble that taking photos

00:40:33 --> 00:40:36 on photographic plates of the spectral lines,

00:40:36 --> 00:40:38 the resolution isn't good enough. Our

00:40:38 --> 00:40:41 spectrograph we've got up at Matt Kent in our

00:40:41 --> 00:40:43 facility, Merv Ross Rallis. Typically, the

00:40:43 --> 00:40:45 measurements we're making are measurements of

00:40:45 --> 00:40:48 a thousandth of a pixel shift

00:40:48 --> 00:40:50 in a given line. And the only way we can do

00:40:50 --> 00:40:52 that is because you're seeing thousands of

00:40:52 --> 00:40:54 lines at once and you can work out

00:40:54 --> 00:40:56 statistically what they're doing. So even

00:40:56 --> 00:40:58 with the most modern cameras and most modern

00:40:58 --> 00:41:00 technology, it's still hard. And that's why,

00:41:00 --> 00:41:03 even though we had the wherewithal to

00:41:03 --> 00:41:05 understand the physics and, um, to know how

00:41:05 --> 00:41:07 to do the techniques, 200 years ago,

00:41:08 --> 00:41:10 we were stuck in a technology gap. We just

00:41:10 --> 00:41:12 had to wait for the technology to reach the

00:41:12 --> 00:41:14 right place. And that's why finding the first

00:41:14 --> 00:41:16 was hard. But once you found one, you'll find

00:41:16 --> 00:41:18 tech 10, you'll find 100, you'll find a

00:41:18 --> 00:41:20 thousand. I'd m point people, incidentally,

00:41:20 --> 00:41:23 to the astonishingly beautiful videos by

00:41:23 --> 00:41:25 System Sounds, in partnership with NASA, that

00:41:25 --> 00:41:28 were put out to celebrate the 4 and 5000th

00:41:28 --> 00:41:31 discovered exoplanets, where they run the

00:41:31 --> 00:41:33 discoveries over time on a, on a map of the

00:41:33 --> 00:41:35 sky where the discoveries are marked with a

00:41:35 --> 00:41:38 little ring. And every planet gets its own

00:41:38 --> 00:41:40 musical note, where the musical note tells

00:41:40 --> 00:41:42 you the orbital period of that planet around

00:41:42 --> 00:41:44 the star. So a high Pitched note like a ding

00:41:45 --> 00:41:46 will be a planet really close and going

00:41:46 --> 00:41:48 around really quick and low pitch note like a

00:41:48 --> 00:41:51 ding that'll be a planet a long, long way

00:41:51 --> 00:41:53 away going around really slowly. And um, it

00:41:53 --> 00:41:56 shows you the diversity we found but it also

00:41:56 --> 00:41:59 shows you this incredibly accelerating

00:41:59 --> 00:42:01 rate at which we're getting better at doing

00:42:01 --> 00:42:03 it because now we've crossed that threshold

00:42:03 --> 00:42:06 where the technology wasn't good enough. And

00:42:06 --> 00:42:08 now the technology keeps getting better, we

00:42:08 --> 00:42:09 get better at doing it and the numbers

00:42:09 --> 00:42:11 continue m to rise. And depending who you

00:42:11 --> 00:42:13 talk to, there are people who suggest we may

00:42:13 --> 00:42:15 well actually we'll certainly cross the

00:42:15 --> 00:42:17 10 count by 2030.

00:42:18 --> 00:42:20 Might not be long after that before we cross

00:42:20 --> 00:42:22 100 mark. That will all depend on Gaia,

00:42:22 --> 00:42:24 but also the Nancy Grace Roman telescope

00:42:24 --> 00:42:26 that's due to launch in a few years time.

00:42:27 --> 00:42:30 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah, it's going to be amazing. Uh,

00:42:30 --> 00:42:32 and uh, who knows what we will find.

00:42:33 --> 00:42:35 And we'll talk about uh, a bit more in a

00:42:35 --> 00:42:37 moment here on Space Nuts.

00:42:40 --> 00:42:42 Three, two, one.

00:42:43 --> 00:42:44 Jonti Horner: Space Nuts.

00:42:44 --> 00:42:46 Andrew Dunkley: And you're with Andrew Dunkley and Professor

00:42:46 --> 00:42:49 Jonty Horner. We're talking exoplanets on

00:42:49 --> 00:42:52 this special episode. Uh, it's

00:42:52 --> 00:42:55 our last segment. So, um, over to you

00:42:55 --> 00:42:57 Jonty. Where do you, where do you want to go

00:42:57 --> 00:42:59 to finish off this particularly interesting

00:42:59 --> 00:42:59 topic?

00:42:59 --> 00:43:02 Jonti Horner: Well, I think it's also worth flagging out

00:43:02 --> 00:43:04 the diversity places that are doing this work

00:43:04 --> 00:43:05 as well. I mean amateur astronomers are

00:43:05 --> 00:43:07 contributing a huge amount. We're now at the

00:43:07 --> 00:43:09 point where, where the technology's moved on

00:43:09 --> 00:43:12 enough that you can observe and measure

00:43:12 --> 00:43:15 exoplanet transits using a fairly cheap off

00:43:15 --> 00:43:17 the shelf telescope. Many amateur astronomers

00:43:17 --> 00:43:19 will occasionally observe the transit of one

00:43:19 --> 00:43:21 of our bright planets. There was an article

00:43:21 --> 00:43:23 on Australia's ABC News recently about some

00:43:23 --> 00:43:25 amateur astronomers who banded together to be

00:43:25 --> 00:43:28 involved in planet discovery. I'm

00:43:29 --> 00:43:32 increasingly proud of the facility we've got

00:43:32 --> 00:43:34 at Uni sq, which is as far as we know, the

00:43:34 --> 00:43:37 only dedicated Southern Hemisphere exoplanet

00:43:37 --> 00:43:38 observatory in the Southern Hemisphere.

00:43:38 --> 00:43:40 There's a lot of facilities looking for them,

00:43:40 --> 00:43:43 but we've got our own facility at Matt Kent

00:43:43 --> 00:43:46 Observatory just outside Toowoomba that all

00:43:46 --> 00:43:47 it does is look for planets and learn more

00:43:47 --> 00:43:49 about them. It doesn't split its time with

00:43:49 --> 00:43:52 other tasks. Its job is planet search.

00:43:52 --> 00:43:54 And it's really important to stress that

00:43:54 --> 00:43:56 particularly for the younger listeners from

00:43:56 --> 00:43:58 Australia, there's this perception

00:43:59 --> 00:44:01 that the only place you can go to do real

00:44:01 --> 00:44:03 science and to become a scientist is to go to

00:44:03 --> 00:44:05 the big cities, the big capital cities, to

00:44:05 --> 00:44:08 the group Fake Universities and for people in

00:44:08 --> 00:44:09 regional Australia, and particularly people

00:44:09 --> 00:44:12 from less prestigious

00:44:12 --> 00:44:14 backgrounds, lower socioeconomic backgrounds,

00:44:14 --> 00:44:16 all the rest of it, there's this very much

00:44:16 --> 00:44:18 feeling that it's a big city thing and you've

00:44:18 --> 00:44:19 got to go to the right schools. But we're at

00:44:19 --> 00:44:22 a small regional university in regional

00:44:22 --> 00:44:24 Australia and we're leading the world in

00:44:24 --> 00:44:27 this. You know, we have two of my colleagues,

00:44:27 --> 00:44:29 um, Professor George Zhao and Associate

00:44:29 --> 00:44:31 Professor Chelsea Huang are, uh, between them

00:44:31 --> 00:44:34 responsible for 30% of all time Australia

00:44:34 --> 00:44:36 has ever had allocated on the James Webb

00:44:36 --> 00:44:39 Space Telescope. And, uh, they've sat to

00:44:39 --> 00:44:41 study planets around other stars. So I do

00:44:41 --> 00:44:43 want to stress to people listening that this

00:44:43 --> 00:44:45 is not just something that's done in the US

00:44:45 --> 00:44:47 or it's not just something that's done at the

00:44:47 --> 00:44:49 world's top 10 universities. It's something

00:44:49 --> 00:44:51 that you can participate in yourself. There's

00:44:51 --> 00:44:53 some fabulous citizen science programmes out

00:44:53 --> 00:44:55 there and uh, there is going to be an

00:44:55 --> 00:44:58 increasing extreme wealth

00:44:58 --> 00:45:00 of data coming out in the coming years that

00:45:00 --> 00:45:02 uh, astronomers simply won't have enough

00:45:02 --> 00:45:04 hands to go through. So I'm sure that, that

00:45:04 --> 00:45:06 if people keep their eyes out, there will be

00:45:06 --> 00:45:08 other citizen science programmes pop up in

00:45:08 --> 00:45:10 the coming years. You know, we've got,

00:45:10 --> 00:45:12 currently I'm looking at the wonderful NASA

00:45:12 --> 00:45:15 Rexoplanet archive here, looking at the

00:45:15 --> 00:45:16 different methods planets have been

00:45:16 --> 00:45:18 discovered by, and we've now got, I think

00:45:18 --> 00:45:20 it's 11 different methods that have been

00:45:20 --> 00:45:22 used. Of our

00:45:22 --> 00:45:25 6283 planets,

00:45:25 --> 00:45:28 4640 have been found by the

00:45:28 --> 00:45:30 transit method. That's overwhelmingly the

00:45:30 --> 00:45:32 most successful now. And that's because you

00:45:32 --> 00:45:33 can play a numbers game. You can look at

00:45:33 --> 00:45:36 thousands of stars at once, looking to see if

00:45:36 --> 00:45:38 any of them wink. And that's what the Kepler

00:45:38 --> 00:45:40 spacecraft and more recently NASA's test

00:45:40 --> 00:45:43 spacecraft did. We've got nearly

00:45:43 --> 00:45:44 1200 planets found with the radial velocity

00:45:44 --> 00:45:47 method, the wobbled method. Now should be

00:45:47 --> 00:45:49 said this is a discovery method and a lot of

00:45:49 --> 00:45:51 these planets have then been studied using

00:45:51 --> 00:45:52 other methods. But this is how they were

00:45:52 --> 00:45:55 found. So between those two were, uh, what,

00:45:55 --> 00:45:58 5800 of the known

00:45:58 --> 00:46:00 planets, 6200 were found by those.

00:46:01 --> 00:46:03 That's 90 odd percent of the

00:46:03 --> 00:46:06 remainder. We, uh, know of 278 planets that

00:46:06 --> 00:46:08 were found by microlensing. This is where you

00:46:08 --> 00:46:11 look at very distant stars like the middle of

00:46:11 --> 00:46:13 the galaxy and look for planets and stars

00:46:13 --> 00:46:15 that we can't see passing along our line of

00:46:15 --> 00:46:18 sight and their mass bending light to

00:46:18 --> 00:46:20 cause that background star to brighten then

00:46:20 --> 00:46:23 fade. Very small number found so far.

00:46:23 --> 00:46:25 But the Nancy Grace Roman telescope will

00:46:25 --> 00:46:28 likely discover thousands, if not tens of

00:46:28 --> 00:46:30 thousands of microlensing planets in the

00:46:30 --> 00:46:32 coming years. Because that telescope's going

00:46:32 --> 00:46:33 to go and stare at the middle of the galaxy,

00:46:33 --> 00:46:36 among other things, and should be very useful

00:46:36 --> 00:46:39 at that. We've got nearly a hundred planets

00:46:39 --> 00:46:41 now discovered by direct imaging,

00:46:41 --> 00:46:43 and they're really interesting because

00:46:43 --> 00:46:44 they're the ones where we actually see the

00:46:44 --> 00:46:46 planet and we find it by seeing the light

00:46:46 --> 00:46:48 from the planet. So it's amazing that we're

00:46:48 --> 00:46:51 nearly at 100 there. And my favourite movie

00:46:51 --> 00:46:53 of all time Time is really the

00:46:54 --> 00:46:57 movie of the planets orbiting the star HR

00:46:57 --> 00:46:59 8799, where observations spanning

00:46:59 --> 00:47:01 more than decade now have been made, where

00:47:01 --> 00:47:03 you can see four planets around that star and

00:47:03 --> 00:47:06 watch them move in their orbits. And you

00:47:06 --> 00:47:08 think from where we were when I was a kid,

00:47:08 --> 00:47:10 where we didn't even know if there were any

00:47:10 --> 00:47:12 planets out there, we can now watch some of

00:47:12 --> 00:47:15 them go around their stars in real time.

00:47:15 --> 00:47:16 That's just astonishing.

00:47:17 --> 00:47:19 There's a lot of other really niche methods

00:47:19 --> 00:47:20 that have been used news, but they're kind of

00:47:20 --> 00:47:23 the big four, I'd say. And I think the one

00:47:23 --> 00:47:25 that's going to grow over the coming decade

00:47:25 --> 00:47:28 more than any other is astrometry. So at the

00:47:28 --> 00:47:30 minute there is a grand total of six planets

00:47:30 --> 00:47:32 that have been discovered by astrometry. This

00:47:32 --> 00:47:34 is measuring the positions of stars in the

00:47:34 --> 00:47:36 sky and seeing them wobble side to side. It's

00:47:36 --> 00:47:39 what Bessel did with Sirius to find Sirius B.

00:47:39 --> 00:47:41 We've only found six so far, but the Gaia,

00:47:41 --> 00:47:44 uh, spacecraft observed for a long time,

00:47:44 --> 00:47:45 finished observing, but we're still getting

00:47:45 --> 00:47:47 new data releases from. From it. Gaia data

00:47:47 --> 00:47:50 release number four is coming allegedly in

00:47:50 --> 00:47:52 December this year. Maybe push back a little

00:47:52 --> 00:47:55 bit, but that's where they will have enough

00:47:55 --> 00:47:57 quality and analysis of the data and enough

00:47:58 --> 00:48:00 time period the data covers to start finding

00:48:00 --> 00:48:03 planets in the Gaia data doing astrometry

00:48:04 --> 00:48:06 and people are still predicting that could

00:48:06 --> 00:48:08 yield tens of thousands of planets. Even if

00:48:08 --> 00:48:11 you're a pessimist, it's easy that Gaia

00:48:11 --> 00:48:14 could take over from Kepler and TESS as a

00:48:14 --> 00:48:16 tool that found the most planets. That's just

00:48:16 --> 00:48:18 in the next year or two. And what we're doing

00:48:18 --> 00:48:21 then we're finding more, but where we're

00:48:21 --> 00:48:22 shifting to is not just finding them, but

00:48:22 --> 00:48:25 learning more about them, characterising

00:48:25 --> 00:48:27 them. And that's where the future of

00:48:27 --> 00:48:29 exoplanet science is. It's not just enough

00:48:29 --> 00:48:31 now to find a planet, we want to learn more

00:48:31 --> 00:48:33 about it. What's its atmosphere made of?

00:48:34 --> 00:48:36 What's its internal composition? What's it

00:48:36 --> 00:48:39 like? That's where we're going. And

00:48:39 --> 00:48:42 um, we're making great leaps in that we are

00:48:42 --> 00:48:44 finding out what chemical species are in the

00:48:44 --> 00:48:45 atmospheres of different planets. Currently

00:48:45 --> 00:48:47 only really doing it for the very biggest

00:48:47 --> 00:48:49 ones because of the easiest to observe. But

00:48:49 --> 00:48:51 that's very much the future. And that's what

00:48:51 --> 00:48:53 will lead to the search for life elsewhere,

00:48:53 --> 00:48:55 which I think is what really hooks a lot of

00:48:55 --> 00:48:56 people into the subject.

00:48:57 --> 00:48:59 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah, it's fascinating. For the record, the

00:48:59 --> 00:49:02 first actual photograph of an

00:49:02 --> 00:49:03 Exoplanet was in

00:49:03 --> 00:49:05


00:49:07 --> 00:49:08 Jonti Horner: and

00:49:08 --> 00:49:10 Andrew Dunkley: it was 2m, um, 1207b.

00:49:10 --> 00:49:10 Jonti Horner: Yes.

00:49:11 --> 00:49:13 Andrew Dunkley: Which apparently is an exoplanet, uh,

00:49:13 --> 00:49:15 orbiting a gas giant.

00:49:16 --> 00:49:18 Yes. Which is a big, a big one,

00:49:18 --> 00:49:21 about five times the mass of Jupiter. So, um,

00:49:21 --> 00:49:23 yeah, so that was the first one ever

00:49:23 --> 00:49:25 photographed that we actually got to see a

00:49:25 --> 00:49:28 picture of rather than just identified

00:49:28 --> 00:49:29 through some.

00:49:29 --> 00:49:30 Jonti Horner: I mean we're still just seeing them as a

00:49:30 --> 00:49:33 single pixel. We're not going to be at the

00:49:33 --> 00:49:35 point of Star Trek type images of the surface

00:49:35 --> 00:49:37 for a long, long, long time because the

00:49:37 --> 00:49:39 resolutions are challenged there. But that

00:49:39 --> 00:49:42 was a breathtaking thing. And it is worth

00:49:42 --> 00:49:44 noting that the overwhelming majority of the

00:49:44 --> 00:49:46 direct imaging planets that we've imaged are

00:49:46 --> 00:49:49 um, massive and um, young. And the thing

00:49:49 --> 00:49:50 about them being young is they're still

00:49:50 --> 00:49:52 hotter, which means they glow brighter and

00:49:52 --> 00:49:53 therefore are easier to see.

00:49:54 --> 00:49:57 Andrew Dunkley: M okay, um,

00:49:57 --> 00:50:00 last chance to talk about exoplanets.

00:50:00 --> 00:50:01 We're going to wrap it up in a sec. Any, any

00:50:01 --> 00:50:02 final comments?

00:50:02 --> 00:50:05 Jonti Horner: Well, I think, I think there is so much more

00:50:05 --> 00:50:07 we could talk about. I mean like every topic

00:50:07 --> 00:50:09 we get onto, I talk too much. But we could

00:50:09 --> 00:50:10 fill several hours worth of excitement

00:50:10 --> 00:50:13 digging into the nitty gritty. But I think

00:50:13 --> 00:50:14 the thing that leaps out to me probably even

00:50:14 --> 00:50:17 more than the ubiquity of planets, the fact

00:50:17 --> 00:50:19 that they're everywhere, is the diversity.

00:50:19 --> 00:50:22 You know, when I was growing up, we thought

00:50:22 --> 00:50:24 that there would be other planetary systems,

00:50:24 --> 00:50:25 but we weren't sure. But we assumed they'd be

00:50:25 --> 00:50:26 like the solar system, you know, rocky

00:50:26 --> 00:50:28 planets on the interior, giant planets on the

00:50:28 --> 00:50:31 outside. Yeah. And the first planets

00:50:31 --> 00:50:33 discovered shattered that you had planets

00:50:33 --> 00:50:35 around a pulsar, which makes no sense.

00:50:36 --> 00:50:37 Um, we think there are probably a second

00:50:37 --> 00:50:39 generation of planets. The initial planets

00:50:39 --> 00:50:41 there were destroyed and new ones formed

00:50:41 --> 00:50:43 after the supernova, but we're not sure. You

00:50:43 --> 00:50:45 then found a hot Jupiter, a planet the size

00:50:45 --> 00:50:47 of Jupiter, going around a star like the sun

00:50:47 --> 00:50:49 every few days and that was enough to

00:50:49 --> 00:50:51 revolutionise our understanding of how

00:50:51 --> 00:50:53 planetary systems form. And with every new

00:50:53 --> 00:50:55 technique and with every new facility and

00:50:55 --> 00:50:58 with every new way of finding planets, we

00:50:58 --> 00:51:00 find planets that are more different to the

00:51:00 --> 00:51:02 solar system than we could ever possibly

00:51:02 --> 00:51:04 imagine. The lightest, well, not the

00:51:04 --> 00:51:06 lightest, the fluffiest planets, the lowest

00:51:06 --> 00:51:08 density planets are so fluffy that they're

00:51:08 --> 00:51:10 being torn apart by their stars. We mentioned

00:51:10 --> 00:51:13 them early on. The highest density

00:51:13 --> 00:51:16 of any planet in the exoplanet catalogue is

00:51:16 --> 00:51:18 denser than any metal or mineral or anything

00:51:18 --> 00:51:21 known on Earth by such a large distance. Uh,

00:51:21 --> 00:51:22 there is speculation that it could be a

00:51:22 --> 00:51:24 fragment of a white dwarf or something. That

00:51:24 --> 00:51:27 it could be actually not a lump

00:51:27 --> 00:51:29 of iron but a lump of white dwarf material or

00:51:29 --> 00:51:32 something. We just don't know. And everything

00:51:32 --> 00:51:34 in between. We're finding that the planets in

00:51:34 --> 00:51:37 our solar system are pretty

00:51:37 --> 00:51:39 average. We still don't have a handle on

00:51:40 --> 00:51:42 how common are planets like the Earth. How

00:51:42 --> 00:51:44 common are planets on, like the Earth? On

00:51:44 --> 00:51:47 Earth like orbits. We also don't really have

00:51:47 --> 00:51:49 a handle yet on how common are ah, planets

00:51:49 --> 00:51:50 like Jupiter and Saturn, in other words

00:51:50 --> 00:51:53 called Jupiters planets that take a decade

00:51:53 --> 00:51:55 um, or more to orbit their star because

00:51:55 --> 00:51:56 finding them hard you need to watch for a

00:51:56 --> 00:51:59 long time. So we know much more about planets

00:51:59 --> 00:52:01 close in and planets very different to our

00:52:01 --> 00:52:04 own than we do about planet planetary systems

00:52:04 --> 00:52:05 similar to the solar system. So I think one

00:52:05 --> 00:52:08 of the big questions now is not is the solar

00:52:08 --> 00:52:11 system unique but rather how

00:52:11 --> 00:52:13 unusual or usual is the solar system,

00:52:14 --> 00:52:17 our planetary systems like our one common or

00:52:17 --> 00:52:19 are we a bit of an exception? We're not

00:52:19 --> 00:52:21 really in a position to answer um, that yet.

00:52:21 --> 00:52:24 It seems that the frequency of

00:52:24 --> 00:52:26 Jupiter like planets around other stars is

00:52:26 --> 00:52:29 somewhere between 5 and 20%. And by Jupiter

00:52:29 --> 00:52:32 like, I mean Jupiter mass on a Jupiter like

00:52:32 --> 00:52:34 orbit around stars like the sun.

00:52:34 --> 00:52:37 But that's a big variety of,

00:52:37 --> 00:52:39 you know, possibilities we just don't know

00:52:39 --> 00:52:42 yet. And so even though we now

00:52:42 --> 00:52:44 know that planets are everywhere, we've

00:52:44 --> 00:52:46 barely scratched the surface. And it's the

00:52:46 --> 00:52:47 kind of thing where if we had this chat again

00:52:47 --> 00:52:49 in five years time the numbers would be

00:52:49 --> 00:52:51 different but there would be whole swathes of

00:52:51 --> 00:52:54 new knowledge then that we can't even predict

00:52:54 --> 00:52:56 now. There will be things that surprise us

00:52:56 --> 00:52:58 just as much in the years to come as hot

00:52:58 --> 00:53:00 Jupiter's and pulsar planets did at the dawn

00:53:00 --> 00:53:02 of the era. And that's part of the fun.

00:53:03 --> 00:53:05 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah, and there'll probably be planets we

00:53:05 --> 00:53:08 can't even imagine that would

00:53:08 --> 00:53:10 be discovered that we couldn't have even

00:53:10 --> 00:53:13 contemplated, contemplated existing.

00:53:14 --> 00:53:17 Um, and I can't even pretend to make one up

00:53:17 --> 00:53:18 at the moment. But there will be. Of course

00:53:18 --> 00:53:21 the search, as you mentioned, is for an Earth

00:53:21 --> 00:53:24 like planet. A planet, a, uh,

00:53:24 --> 00:53:26 rocky planet in the right place orbiting a

00:53:26 --> 00:53:29 star like ours, um, that

00:53:29 --> 00:53:31 basically duplicates Earth. We just haven't

00:53:31 --> 00:53:33 found one of those yet, have we?

00:53:33 --> 00:53:36 Jonti Horner: No, no. With a caveat we may

00:53:36 --> 00:53:38 have done and it have not been picked up.

00:53:38 --> 00:53:40 There's more to learn about these things.

00:53:40 --> 00:53:43 Things I still think of the planets

00:53:43 --> 00:53:45 we've found so far. Venus is more like the

00:53:45 --> 00:53:48 Earth than anything we've found so far. I

00:53:48 --> 00:53:51 also think though, that that's even a

00:53:51 --> 00:53:52 difficult question because what do we mean by

00:53:52 --> 00:53:54 it being like the Earth? If you went and

00:53:54 --> 00:53:57 looked at the solar system 4 billion years

00:53:57 --> 00:53:59 ago, I don't think you'd have considered the

00:53:59 --> 00:54:01 Earth an Earth like planet. It would have had

00:54:01 --> 00:54:03 this incredibly thick atmosphere, very

00:54:03 --> 00:54:04 different to ours, with a very different

00:54:04 --> 00:54:07 composition. It would have been outside

00:54:07 --> 00:54:09 the edge of the habitable zone because the

00:54:09 --> 00:54:11 sun was that much fainter. But it would

00:54:11 --> 00:54:12 probably still have liquid water on the

00:54:12 --> 00:54:14 surface because it had such an intense

00:54:14 --> 00:54:17 greenhouse effect. So there could

00:54:17 --> 00:54:18 almost be a philosophical question about how

00:54:18 --> 00:54:20 long would you consider the Earth to have

00:54:20 --> 00:54:21 been an Earth like planet?

00:54:22 --> 00:54:25 Andrew Dunkley: That's a really good point. Yeah. And

00:54:26 --> 00:54:28 the possibility that we have observed planets

00:54:28 --> 00:54:30 that just, ah, aren't where we are yet

00:54:30 --> 00:54:32 because of the time differences in,

00:54:32 --> 00:54:35 in, in the travel, uh, time of our vision.

00:54:35 --> 00:54:38 So again, it mightn't be there yet

00:54:38 --> 00:54:40 and it could be billions of years before it

00:54:40 --> 00:54:42 is and we won't be around to confirm it.

00:54:42 --> 00:54:45 There's all sorts of weirdisms that go into

00:54:45 --> 00:54:48 this. My, the bottom line for me is if they

00:54:48 --> 00:54:49 find one, it's got to have kangaroos on it.

00:54:49 --> 00:54:51 Otherwise there's just no Earth like planets.

00:54:51 --> 00:54:53 Jonti Horner: Oh, absolutely. I mean, would be very

00:54:53 --> 00:54:55 interesting to imagine kangaroos in space. I

00:54:55 --> 00:54:57 talk a lot about, um, the Dragonfly mission

00:54:58 --> 00:55:00 going to Titan, and the fact that Titan is

00:55:00 --> 00:55:01 the only other body we know of with permanent

00:55:01 --> 00:55:03 liquid water on the surface. Well, not

00:55:03 --> 00:55:05 permanent liquid water, permanent liquid on

00:55:05 --> 00:55:07 the surface. The water there is harder than

00:55:07 --> 00:55:09 granite frozen solid, but it's got liquid

00:55:09 --> 00:55:11 methane and Ethernet there. But on Titan,

00:55:12 --> 00:55:14 unlike on Earth, you could fly under your own

00:55:14 --> 00:55:16 power. If you strapped a pair of wings on.

00:55:16 --> 00:55:18 The gravity is low enough in the atmosphere,

00:55:18 --> 00:55:21 dense enough that you could flap around and

00:55:21 --> 00:55:23 saw. I have never thought about how a

00:55:23 --> 00:55:26 kangaroo would react if you took it to Titan.

00:55:26 --> 00:55:28 It would just, uh, launch itself. Just launch

00:55:28 --> 00:55:31 itself. Um, it Would, of course, need a very,

00:55:31 --> 00:55:33 very good space suit because it's so cold

00:55:33 --> 00:55:35 there and kangaroos are not fans of the cold.

00:55:35 --> 00:55:37 But, yeah, that would be the shock. If

00:55:37 --> 00:55:39 Dragonfly hops around, flying around on the

00:55:39 --> 00:55:41 surface of Titan, and then gets attacked by a

00:55:41 --> 00:55:43 kangaroo when it comes into land. Like, we

00:55:43 --> 00:55:45 see some of the videos online of kangaroos

00:55:45 --> 00:55:47 being territorial. That would be the most

00:55:47 --> 00:55:48 bizarre discovery of life elsewhere that I

00:55:48 --> 00:55:50 think I could imagine. Kangaroos on Titan.

00:55:51 --> 00:55:53 Andrew Dunkley: I wait with bated breath. Although kangaroos,

00:55:53 --> 00:55:56 uh, do have one particular problem in this

00:55:56 --> 00:55:58 country. They do not know how to get out of

00:55:58 --> 00:56:00 the way of a car. Even when they do, they go,

00:56:00 --> 00:56:02 oh, no, no, hang on, I want to get back in

00:56:02 --> 00:56:05 front of you. Bang. Okay, see ya. Uh,

00:56:05 --> 00:56:07 anyway, um, that's our problem. I'm sure it's

00:56:07 --> 00:56:09 the same in other countries without other

00:56:09 --> 00:56:11 animals and other planets, probably that

00:56:11 --> 00:56:14 we're unaware of as yet. Uh, Jonty, that's

00:56:14 --> 00:56:17 been a lot of fun. It's a, it's a fascinating

00:56:17 --> 00:56:19 topic and it's one that will keep evolving, I

00:56:19 --> 00:56:20 think is probably, probably the best way to

00:56:20 --> 00:56:22 describe it. Thank you so much and we'll

00:56:22 --> 00:56:23 catch you again real soon.

00:56:23 --> 00:56:24 Jonti Horner: It's a pleasure and I look forward to it.

00:56:25 --> 00:56:28 Andrew Dunkley: Professor Jonty Horner from the University of

00:56:28 --> 00:56:31 Southern Queensland. And thanks, uh, to Huw

00:56:31 --> 00:56:32 in the studio. Couldn't be with us today.

00:56:32 --> 00:56:35 Made a fatal error. He's back in hospital. He

00:56:35 --> 00:56:37 ran into an ex. And, uh, he called

00:56:37 --> 00:56:39 his ex a planet.

00:56:40 --> 00:56:42 Think about that. It's terrible. And don't

00:56:42 --> 00:56:44 forget to visit us online if you dare, at

00:56:44 --> 00:56:47 spacenutspodcast.com or spacenuts

00:56:47 --> 00:56:49 IO until next time, thanks for your company.

00:56:49 --> 00:56:51 We'll see you on the very next episode of

00:56:51 --> 00:56:53 Space Nuts. Bye.

00:56:53 --> 00:56:55 Jonti Horner: Bye. You've been listening to

00:56:55 --> 00:56:57 the Space Nuts podcast,

00:56:58 --> 00:57:01 available at Apple Podcasts, Spotify,

00:57:02 --> 00:57:04 iHeartRadio or your favourite podcast

00:57:04 --> 00:57:06 player. You can also stream on

00:57:06 --> 00:57:08 demand@bytes.com.

00:57:08 --> 00:57:10 Andrew Dunkley: this has been another quality podcast

00:57:10 --> 00:57:12 production from bytes.com.

00:57:12 --> 00:57:12 Jonti Horner: um,