DOCSLIB.ORG
Explore
Sign Up
Log In
Upload
Search
Home
» Tags
» 47 Ursae Majoris
47 Ursae Majoris
Where Are the Distant Worlds? Star Maps
Download the Search for New Planets
400 Years of Women in Science Review by Andrew W
Today in Astronomy 106: Exoplanets
IAU Division C Working Group on Star Names 2019 Annual Report
Superflares and Giant Planets
Downloads/ Astero2007.Pdf) and by Aerts Et Al (2010)
3-D Starmap 15.0 All Stars Within 15 Parsecs (50 Light-Years) of Sol
Arxiv:2010.00015V3 [Hep-Ph] 26 Apr 2021 Galactic Halo Can Scatter with Exoplanets, Lose Energy, and Gles Are the Same Set of Planets, Without DM Heating
Williams & Kasting, 1997
P Lanetary Postc Ards
June 2006.Indd
Planetquest Outreach Toolkit Manual and Resources Cd
Chapter 9: the Life of a Star
Quantization of Planetary Systems and Its Dependency on Stellar Rotation Jean-Paul A
Astrophysics the Stability of the Orbits of Earth-Mass Planets in the Habitable Zone of 47 Ursae Majoris
Radial Velocity and Exoplanet Lab Part A: the Motion of The
Architecture for Space-Based Exoplanet Spectroscopy in the Mid- Infrared
Top View
Scientific American
IAU WGSN 2019 Annual Report
Search for Gas Giants Around Late-M Dwarfs
Occulting Ozone Observatory (O3 ) a Briefing to the NAS EOS-1 Panel
The Habitable Zone of Earth-Like Planets Around 47 Uma
The Discovery of a Planetary Companion to 16 Cygni B
A History of Astronomy, 139 Adhafera
Part I. Reading Part II. the Exoplanet of 47 Ursae Majoris
CHAPTER 7 the NATURE of EXOPLANETARY SYSTEMS Now That the Various Methods of Detecting Exoplanets Have Been Described, We Turn to the Results of the Various Searches
A Relation Between the Exoplanets and Their Host Stars Based on Multivariate Analysis
The Stability of the Orbits of Earth-Mass Planets in the Habitable Zone of 47 Ursae Majoris
Extra-Solar Planets
009 Z-1 Z-2 Z-3 Z-5 Z-8 Z-9 014 015 007 003 008 002 004 010 013 005
Dieta Planetaria
8/1 N&V-Final
UFP Main Core
Investigación Y Ciencia
Physical Cosmology and an Exoplanet Orbiting a Solar-Type Star
Unveiling Exoplanet Atmospheres with the ACCESS Survey