Gliese 581 g, an Earth like planet, Wasp 17b, a gas giant bigger than Jupiter, Kepler 11b.
Only Mercury and some terrestrial exoplanets.
The Hubble and Keppler space telescopes are detecting exoplanets
There are no exoplanets in our solar system. By definition, an exoplanet is a planet that is not in our solar system.
Now we know of 861 exoplanets, with several thousand awaiting confirmation
Not that we know of.
I believe some of them can, but mostly, the exoplanets are discovered and observed with more indirect methods - especially by analyzing the gravitational effects on the star.
Only Mercury and some terrestrial exoplanets.
The Hubble and Keppler space telescopes are detecting exoplanets
There are no exoplanets in our solar system. By definition, an exoplanet is a planet that is not in our solar system.
Now we know of 861 exoplanets, with several thousand awaiting confirmation
Not that we know of.
Exoplanets are planets that are outside of the solar system. These are also referred to as extrasolar planets. Some exoplanets include Alpha Centuri B and Alpha Centuri Bb. It also includes Pluto which is no longer considered to be a planet within the solar system.
exoplanets
"The 3" is just plain wrong; much more than 3 exoplanets have been found so far.
Of the exoplanets found, the vast majority are gaseous bodies.However, that does not mean the majority are. That is just the majority we have found so far.
about 403.
This question is being awnswered in 2014 so it is as of 2014.1,653 dumbhead.