Follow this link to skip to the main content
NASA Ames Research Center
Send
Home > Galleries > Artwork > Diagrams



A comparison of the KOI-961 planet system with the Jupiter-moon system in both sizes and distances, but object sizes and distances between objects are at different scales.
KOI-961 System Compared With Jupiter System
01/11/2012

'Honey I Shrunk the Planetary System'

PIA15259. Get Hi-res TIFF format. See also: Artist's Concepts.

This artist's conception compares the KOI-961 planetary system to Jupiter and the largest four of its many moons. The KOI-961 planetary system hosts the three smallest planets known to orbit a star beyond our sun (called KOI-961.01, KOI-961.02 and KOI-961.03). The smallest of these planets, KOI-961.03, is about the same size as Mars. All three planets take less than two days to whip around their star.

The planets were discovered using data from NASA's Kepler mission and ground-based telescopes. The KOI-961 star is a tiny "red dwarf," just one-sixth the size of our sun. This planetary system is the most compact detected to date, with a scale closer to Jupiter and its moons than another star system.

The planet and moon orbits are drawn to the same scale. The relative sizes of the stars, planets and moons have been increased for visibility.

Credit: Caltech

<< RETURN TO GALLERY