Finding exoplanets is like looking for hidden toys in a big room, you can’t see them at first, but you know they’re there because they change how things look around them.
Imagine you and your friend are playing with a seesaw. When your friend sits on one end, the seesaw moves up and down. Scientists use this idea to find exoplanets, which are planets that orbit stars outside our solar system.
How It Works
When an exoplanet passes in front of its star from Earth’s viewpoint, it blocks a little bit of the star’s light, like when you put your hand between a lamp and a wall. Scientists watch for this tiny dip in brightness, which tells them a planet is there.
Sometimes, scientists also look at how a star wobbles, just like how a seesaw moves up and down. This wobble happens because the exoplanet pulls on its star with gravity, and scientists can measure that movement to find the planet too.
It’s like watching your friend’s movements on the seesaw to know they’re there, except instead of friends, it’s faraway planets, and instead of a seesaw, it’s light and motion! Finding exoplanets is like looking for hidden toys in a big room, you can’t see them at first, but you know they’re there because they change how things look around them.
Imagine you and your friend are playing with a seesaw. When your friend sits on one end, the seesaw moves up and down. Scientists use this idea to find exoplanets, which are planets that orbit stars outside our solar system.
Examples
- Imagine watching a light flicker as something passes between you and it, that’s how scientists spot distant worlds.
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See also
- How are exoplanets discovered and characterized?
- How do astronomers search for life on exoplanets?
- How do new exoplanet discoveries change our understanding of life?
- How do scientists confirm the existence of distant exoplanets?
- How do scientists confirm the discovery of new exoplanets?