There are four indirect methods used to detect exoplanets.
The first method
indirect is the radial velocity method. It is the most common method
used to discover exoplanets. The reflex motion of a star due to the
orbiting planet is measures as a change in a stars radial velocity.
The radial reflex of the star is compared to the exoplanets orbit,
using the measurements of Doppler shifts. These comparisons are used
to calculate the mass of the exoplanet, its orbits shape, and its
orbital distance. The exoplanets discovered using this method tend to
be very low mass planets.
The second indirect
method is the astrometry method. This method measures a star's
position and how it changes over time so is mostly used to discover
exoplanets that have very long periods. After that you can use the
acquired information to determine the actual mass of the exoplanet
because you can determine the orbital plane of the exoplanet. The
best place to use astrometry is in space but you can use this method
from the surface of earth. The exoplanets discovered using this method
tend to be very far from the solar system.
The third indirect
method is the transit method. A transit is an event that occurs when
a celestial object moves in-front of another celestial object. When
the celestial body moves infront of the other larger celestial body
it hides a small portion of it. Observers can see this occurrence at
particular orbital points. This method reveals exoplanets when they
transit their larger companion stars. Observers see a drop in the
visual brightness of the companion star. The exoplanets orbit has to be perfectly aligned
with the observers viewing point or the observer could easily miss
the exoplanet. Also there is a very high amount of false exoplanet
detections when using the transit method because dust, gas, and even
planetary debris can easily cause a star to appear dimmer.
The fourth indirect
method is gravitational lensing. Gravitational lensing occurs when
the presence of matter effects the path of a light ray. The light
ray, from the observers view can appear to be curved or highly
unusual. The gravity field of a star can behave like a lens and it
can magnify the light of a background star. The star, the background
star, and the Earth all move relative to each other. If the lensing
star has a companion exoplanet, then the exoplanet's gravitational
field can be detected through its contribution to lensing effect.
This effect only occurs when the stars are almost perfectly aligned.
The lensing events are very short and they can never be repeated so
it is very difficult to detect exoplanets using this method.
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