First Exoplanet Discovery Marks Turning Point in Space Exploration, Spurs Nobel Prize for Pioneers

November 1, 2025
First Exoplanet Discovery Marks Turning Point in Space Exploration, Spurs Nobel Prize for Pioneers
  • In a landmark discovery on November 1, 1995, Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz found the first planet orbiting a sunlike star, 51 Pegasi b (Dimidium), at Haute-Provence Observatory, a turning point for exoplanet science.

  • Since then, exoplanet research has exploded, revealing thousands of worlds with diverse types—from hot Jupiters to super-Earths and water-rich or desert planets—though no confirmed life-harboring planet has been found yet.

  • Mayor and Queloz shared the 2019 Nobel Prize in Physics for their Dimidium work, alongside James Peebles for cosmology.

  • Dimidium is a hot Jupiter—larger in diameter than Jupiter but about half its mass—orbiting 51 Pegasi at roughly 5 million miles away with a 4.2-day orbital period.

  • The discovery relied on measuring the star's wobble via Doppler shifts and light analysis, and it quickly spurred verification and a surge in exoplanet research, including the first direct image of an exoplanet in 2004.

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