- #1
lpetrich
- 988
- 180
http://phl.upr.edu/projects/habitable-exoplanets-catalog/media/pte has an interesting classification, though it's a general grid rather than a wrap-around table.
Here are the planet sizes:
Mercurian /
Miniterran ... 10^(-5) - 0.1 Me ... 0.03 - 0.4 Re
Subterran ... 0.1 - 0.5 Me ... 0.4 - 0.8 Re
Terran ... 0.5 - 2 Me ... 0.8 - 1.25 Re
Superterran ... 2 - 10 Me ... 1.25 - 2.5 Re
Neptunian ... 10 - 50 Me ... 2.5 - 6 Re
Jovian ... > 50 Me ... > 6 Re
These look rather arbitrary, but it would be nice if someone could propose boundaries associated with changes in planets' features. Like having an atmosphere or having plate tectonics or being rocky or watery as opposed to gassy.
Here are the surface temperatures, by whether the planet's surface has a habitable range of temperatures:
Hot -- too hot
Warm -- in the right range
Cold -- too cold
I'm not going to repeat the numbers for known exoplanets and Kepler candidates, but I'll do so for the Solar System, so one can see how this system works:
Hot Miniterrans ... 1 ... Mercury
Warm Miniterrans ... 1 ... Moon
Cold Miniterrans ... (numerous) ... the larger asteroids, outer-planet moons, Kuiper-belt objects
Hot Subterrans ... 0
Warm Subterrans ... 1 ... Mars
Cold Subterrans ... 0
Hot Terrans ... 1 ... Venus
Warm Terrans ... 1 ... Earth
Cold Terrans ... 0
Hot, Warm, Cold Superterrans ... 0
Hot, Warm Neptunians ... 0
Cold Neptunians ... 2 ... Uranus, Neptune
Hot, Warm Jovians ... 0
Cold Jovians ... 2 ... Jupiter, Saturn
The Solar System does not fit the statistics of known exoplanets or Kepler candidates very well, but that is due to observational selection. Most of the Solar System's larger objects are invisible to our exoplanet-search efforts to date, or at best borderline visible, like Jupiter.
It is also evident that the Solar System has a gap in the superterran part of the classification.
Here are the planet sizes:
Mercurian /
Miniterran ... 10^(-5) - 0.1 Me ... 0.03 - 0.4 Re
Subterran ... 0.1 - 0.5 Me ... 0.4 - 0.8 Re
Terran ... 0.5 - 2 Me ... 0.8 - 1.25 Re
Superterran ... 2 - 10 Me ... 1.25 - 2.5 Re
Neptunian ... 10 - 50 Me ... 2.5 - 6 Re
Jovian ... > 50 Me ... > 6 Re
These look rather arbitrary, but it would be nice if someone could propose boundaries associated with changes in planets' features. Like having an atmosphere or having plate tectonics or being rocky or watery as opposed to gassy.
Here are the surface temperatures, by whether the planet's surface has a habitable range of temperatures:
Hot -- too hot
Warm -- in the right range
Cold -- too cold
I'm not going to repeat the numbers for known exoplanets and Kepler candidates, but I'll do so for the Solar System, so one can see how this system works:
Hot Miniterrans ... 1 ... Mercury
Warm Miniterrans ... 1 ... Moon
Cold Miniterrans ... (numerous) ... the larger asteroids, outer-planet moons, Kuiper-belt objects
Hot Subterrans ... 0
Warm Subterrans ... 1 ... Mars
Cold Subterrans ... 0
Hot Terrans ... 1 ... Venus
Warm Terrans ... 1 ... Earth
Cold Terrans ... 0
Hot, Warm, Cold Superterrans ... 0
Hot, Warm Neptunians ... 0
Cold Neptunians ... 2 ... Uranus, Neptune
Hot, Warm Jovians ... 0
Cold Jovians ... 2 ... Jupiter, Saturn
The Solar System does not fit the statistics of known exoplanets or Kepler candidates very well, but that is due to observational selection. Most of the Solar System's larger objects are invisible to our exoplanet-search efforts to date, or at best borderline visible, like Jupiter.
It is also evident that the Solar System has a gap in the superterran part of the classification.