Epsilon Eridani b
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Epsilon Eridani b
Epsilon Eridani b, formally named AEgir, is an exoplanet about 10.5 light-years from Earth. It orbits the star Epsilon Eridani in the constellation of Eridanus, which means "the River" in Latin River. This planet was discovered in the year 2000 and, as of 2025, it is the only confirmed planet in its whole planetary system.
What makes Epsilon Eridani b special is that it looks a lot like our planet Jupiter. It has a similar size and follows a path around its star that is like Jupiter’s path around our Sun. Scientists think that studying this planet can help us learn more about how gas giant planets form and change. Because it is like Jupiter, Epsilon Eridani b gives us a chance to compare planets in our solar system with those far away.
Name
The planet and its star were given official names by the International Astronomical Union through a public contest. In December 2015, the names were announced: the planet is called AEgir, and the star is called Ran. These names come from old Norse stories. A young person named James Ott, who was 14 years old at the time, suggested these names and won the contest. There is also a moon of Saturn named Aegir, which shares the same name but with different capitalization.
Characteristics
Epsilon Eridani b goes around its star, Epsilon Eridani, at a distance of 3.53 AU. It takes about 7.33 years to finish one orbit. Its orbit is almost a circle, like the orbit of Jupiter in our Solar System.
The planet’s mass is very close to Jupiter’s, at 1.00 Jupiter masses. This means it is almost the same size and orbit as Jupiter.
History of observations
Scientists first thought they saw a planet around the star Epsilon Eridani in 1988, but they needed more information to be sure. The planet was officially discovered in 2000 by a team led by Artie Hatzes. They found it to be about the same size as Jupiter, our solar system's largest planet.
Over the years, scientists have kept watching Epsilon Eridani b to learn more about it. Sometimes they thought its orbit was very stretched out, and other times they thought it was almost circular. In 2019, new observations helped solve some puzzles about the planet's orbit. Even with new telescopes like the James Webb Space Telescope, scientists are still working to get clear pictures of this distant world.
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Epsilon Eridani b, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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