ASPCS
 
Back to Volume
Paper: Indirect Detection of Extrasolar Planets via Astrometry
Monograph: 7, Science with a Next Generation Very Large Array
Page: 185
Authors: Butler, B. J.; Matthews, B. C.
Abstract: Radio wavelength astrometry of stars and other objects has a long and productive history. The use of that technique to determine whether stars have planets around them would cover a nearly unique part of the parameter space for detection of those systems. Namely, astrometric observations are most sensitive to systems with large planets in moderately wide orbits (a few to ∼10 AU), because it is those systems that produce large reflex motion of the star, in a short enough measurement period (years to tens of years). In addition, astrometric observations are most sensitive to systems which are nearly face-on. Other techniques (radial velocity, or the photometric method of Kepler) are more sensitive to systems with planets in close orbits (less than ∼1 AU), which are nearly edge-on. We describe here, using the Hipparcos and Gaia star catalogs, how ngVLA could use this technique on hundreds of stars, some tens of which are solar analogs, to determine whether these stars have planets orbiting them.
Back to Volume