Asset Publisher

What kind of planets will CHEOPS study?

What kind of planets will CHEOPS study?


Date: 04 February 2019
Satellite: CHEOPS
Copyright: ESA

The Characterising Exoplanet Satellite, CHEOPS, will make measurements of alien worlds that will help determine their nature. It will focus on Earth-to-Neptune sized planets orbiting nearby bright stars, and will measure the size of the planet as it transits in front of the star.

Combined with known information about the mass of the planet, these data will enable scientists to distinguish between a dense rocky world or rather more gaseous, a water-world or an ice-rich planet – as represented from left to right in this artist's impression.

CHEOPS will identify which planets are rather more similar in composition to Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars in our own Solar System, or if they resemble small versions of the outer Solar System's gas giants like Neptune or Uranus. It will also be able to identify hot-Jupiters – large gas planets similar in mass and size to Jupiter but orbiting very close to their host stars – or rather smaller and rocky lava worlds orbiting close to their star.

This first-step characterisation of these worlds – many with no Solar System equivalents – is a critical process towards understanding the formation, origin and evolution of these small exoplanets.

Last Update: 1 September 2019
22-Dec-2024 05:38 UT

ShortUrl Portlet

Shortcut URL

https://sci.esa.int/s/WX6DRXA

Related Videos

Related Publications

Related Links

See Also

Documentation