Catalogue of Exoplanets

Sortable and filterable catalogue of the exoplanet discovered so far.

Example queries:
  • radius:rearth < 10 AND discovered >= 2010
  • mass:mjup > 2.0 AND period:day < 10
  • period:day <= 100 AND (mass:mjup < 2 OR axis:au < 5.0) AND mass:mjup != 10.5
  • "corot" IN name AND NOT "b" IN name
  • "H2O" IN molecules AND "transit" IN detection
Check the docs for syntax description.

Planet Planet Status Mass
(MJup)
Mass*sin(i)
(MJup)
Radius
(RJup)
Period
(day)
a
(AU)
e i
(deg)
Ang. dist.
(arcsec)
Discovery Update ω
(deg)
Tperi
(JD)
Tconj
(JD)
T0
(JD)
T0-sec
(JD)
λ Ang.
(deg)
Impact Param. b
(%)
TVR
(JD)
K
(m/s)
Tcalc
(K)
Tmeas
(K)
hot pt
(deg)
Ag log(g) Publication
Status
Planet
Det. method
Mass Meas.
Method
Radius
Meas. Method
Alternate
names
Molecules Star name α2000
(hh:mm:ss)
δ2000
(dd:mm:ss)
mV mI mJ mH mK Distance
(pc)
Metallicity Mass
(MSun)
Radius
(RSun)
Sp. type Age
(Gy)
Teff
(K)
Detected
Disc
Magnetic
Field
Alternate
names

Downloads

Criteria for inclusion in the catalogue

Physical criteria

The basic criterion is the mass limit: 60 Jupiter mass.

The former standard limits were13 Jupiter mass, based on the deuterium burning limit, and 30 Jupitter mass, based on formation scenario. However, the mass-density-radius distribution (Hatzes & Rauer, 2015) shows a clear difference between giant planets and stars at 60 Jupier mass.

An additional difficulty comes from the uncertainty in the mass value. We therefore allow for a 1 sigma uncertainty and chose 60 Mjup + 1 sigma as an upper mass limit.

We thus finally include planets with masses < 60 Jup up to 1 sigma

Confidence criteria

Are included planet detections published or submitted to professional journals or announced by professional astronomers in professional conferences.

Categories

There are 4 categories of planets, Confirmed, Candidate, Retracted and Controversial. A planet is considered as Confirmed if it is claimed unambiguously in an accepted paper or a professional conference.