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Space

Some exoplanets orbiting red giant stars may just be a mirage

By Leah Crane

18 January 2018

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

A trick of the light

QAI Publishing/Getty

Some exoplanets around red giant stars may be no more than an optical illusion. Variations in starlight that appear to be caused by orbiting worlds could come from ripples in the stars’ surfaces instead.

One method for finding stars relies on measuring changes in the star’s velocity as an orbiting planet makes it wobble back and forth. Because those movements are too small to detect directly, we find them by looking for how they affect the colour of the star’s light.

William Cochran at the University of Texas at Austin…

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