Blogging the UK National Astronomy Meeting 2008
Congratulations to the SuperWASP team, who today announced the discovery of ten new extrasolar planets. Most planet searches look for the wobble produced as the star is pulled first in one direction and then in another, but SuperWASP is different. The two sets of cameras - one on La Palma in the Canary Islands and one in South Africa - monitor many thousands of stars at once, looking for a dip in light as a planet passes between us and its parent star. WASP’s 10 new planets bring the total discovered by this method to 45, of which the UK-based team have been responsible for 15. Congratulations to all involved in the long and difficult road to discovering these new worlds.

The WASP instrument on La Palma. The strange design is the result of a brilliant inspiration on the part of its designers; the stars it monitors are pretty bright, so no telescope is needed. Instead, SuperWASP combines state of the art cameras with camera lenses, producing the wide field of view that’s crucial in monitoring so many stars at once.
4 Responses for "Ten New Planets…"
This is good news for UK astronomy. Fifteen new planets discovered by a UK team. This is real cutting edge science and I will be looking in regularly to find out more about this fascinating subject. It is, certainly, difficult work but I am sure the end justifies the means. Well done to the team.
Too bad this press release went public on April 1 - I actually had to “defend” it as the real thing when a German chronicler of all things exoplanet thought it was a joke. Especially the pictures with the arrays of lenses …
[…] was about the SuperWASP project, which Don works on, and which today announced the discovery of 10 new transiting planets. That is pretty impressive especially considering that only 35 had previously been discovered by […]
[…] we heard about the great successes of SuperWASP in discovering ten new planets by watching for small dips in the star’s light caused by the passage of a planet across our […]
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