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  2. WASP-10b - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WASP-10b

    WASP-10b is an extrasolar planet discovered in 2008 by SuperWASP using the transit method.It takes about 3 days to orbit around WASP-10.Follow-up radial velocity observations showed that it is three times more massive than Jupiter, while the transit observations showed that its radius is only 8% larger than Jupiter's, giving the planet a density more similar to the Moon than a normal gas giant.

  3. WASP-11b/HAT-P-10b - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WASP-11b/HAT-P-10b

    WASP-11b/HAT-P-10b or WASP-11Ab/HAT-P-10Ab [3] is an extrasolar planet discovered in 2008. The discovery was announced (under the designation WASP-11b) by press release by the SuperWASP project in April 2008 along with planets WASP-6b through to WASP-15b, however at this stage more data was needed to confirm the parameters of the planets and the coordinates were not given. [4]

  4. WASP-107b - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WASP-107b

    WASP-107b is a super-Neptune ice giant exoplanet located 200 light years away from Earth in the constellation Virgo. [3] It is roughly the size of Jupiter but less than one-tenth of Jupiter's mass, making it one of known lowest density-exoplanets. [2]

  5. WASP-10 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WASP-10

    WASP-10 is a star in the constellation Pegasus.The SuperWASP project has observed and classified this star as a variable star, perhaps due to the eclipsing planet. [2]The star is likely older than Sun, has fraction of heavy elements close to solar abundance, and is rotating rapidly, being spun up by the tides raised by the giant planet on the close orbit.

  6. WASP-11/HAT-P-10 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WASP-11/HAT-P-10

    A semi-Jovian planet, WASP-11b/HAT-P-10b (WASP-11 A b/HAT-P-10 A b), was detected around the primary star independently by the Hungarian Automated Telescope Network and the Wide Angle Search for Planets teams, both of which used the transit method. [3] [5]

  7. Wide Angle Search for Planets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wide_Angle_Search_for_Planets

    WASP or Wide Angle Search for Planets is an international consortium of several academic organisations performing an ultra-wide angle search for exoplanets using transit photometry. The array of robotic telescopes aims to survey the entire sky, simultaneously monitoring many thousands of stars at an apparent visual magnitude from about 7 to 13.

  8. WASP-17b - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WASP-17b

    WASP-17b, officially named Ditsö̀ [pronunciation?], is an exoplanet in the constellation Scorpius that is orbiting the star WASP-17. Its discovery was announced on 11 August 2009. [ 1 ] It is the first planet discovered to have a retrograde orbit , meaning it orbits in a direction counter to the rotation of its host star. [ 1 ]

  9. WASP-12b - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WASP-12b

    Artist's depiction of WASP-12b's atmosphere being tidally stripped by its parent star. Since hot Jupiter exoplanets are tidally locked (i. e. the same side always faces the host star, just as the same side of the Moon always faces the Earth), there is a large flow of heat from the highly irradiated illuminated side to the cooler dark side.