 Hollywood has fed us with visions of what aliens look like, but rarely paints a picture of where they might live. Dr David Kipping and colleagues from the Department of Physics and Astronomy at University College London, have devised a method for detecting moons in other solar systems that could support life. Dr Kipping had originally been working on the phenomenon of ‘transiting planets’, when a planet passes in front of a distant star. The planet appears to get a little bit dimmer and he was modelling such affects, making equations that could accurately map the motion of the planet as it moved across the star. ‘When the planet passes in front of the star,’ says Kipping, ‘it gives us information about the position and velocity of the planet. As the planet is orbiting around the star, it is also orbiting its moon. There’s this little deviation, this little “wobble” as it goes round. We can essentially look for these wobbles, look for the changes in position, and changes in velocity, and see if it’s the signature of what a moon would create.’
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