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The archive also develops Web-based tools and services to work with the data, particularly the display and analysis of transit data sets from the Kepler mission and COnvection ROtation and planetary Transits (CoRoT) mission, for which the Exoplanet Archive is the U.S. data portal.
Motion interpolation of seven images of the HR 8799 system taken from the W. M. Keck Observatory over seven years, featuring four exoplanets. This is a list of extrasolar planets that have been directly observed, sorted by observed separations.
List of exoplanet firsts; List of exoplanets discovered by the Kepler space telescope; List of exoplanets observed during Kepler's K2 mission; List of extrasolar candidates for liquid water; List of hottest exoplanets; List of coolest exoplanets; List of multiplanetary systems; List of nearest exoplanets; List of nearest terrestrial exoplanet ...
The most massive exoplanet listed on the NASA Exoplanet Archive is HR 2562 b, [9] [10] [11] about 30 times the mass of Jupiter. However, according to some definitions of a planet (based on the nuclear fusion of deuterium [12]), it is too massive to be a planet and might be a brown dwarf.
The following list includes some of the potentially habitable exoplanets discovered so far. It is mostly based on estimates of habitability by the Habitable Worlds Catalog (HWC), and data from the NASA Exoplanet Archive. The HWC is maintained by the Planetary Habitability Laboratory at the University of Puerto Rico at Arecibo. [1]
The NASA Exoplanet Archive is an online astronomical exoplanet catalog and data service that collects and serves public data that support the search for and characterization of extra-solar planets (exoplanets) and their host stars.
The closest exoplanet around a solitary star. Also located in the second closest star system to the Sun, after Alpha Centauri. [6] Not to be confused with the disproved planet Barnard's Star b of 2018, which shared the same name. BD+00 444b 0.0151 ± 0.0035 0.2108 ± 0.0059 15.669 0.105 ± 0.025 519 ± 6 transit 77.99 ± 0.036 0.642 ± 0.026 ...
With an age of just three million years, IRAS 04125+2902 b is the youngest transiting exoplanet so far discovered, [1] and also one of the youngest exoplanets, only a couple of younger <13 M J objects are listed in the NASA Exoplanet Archive. [3]