UF astronomers pioneer new planet-observing technique

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UF astronomers pioneer new planet-observing technique

Post by bystander » Fri Jun 25, 2010 7:50 pm

UF astronomers pioneer new planet-observing technique
University of Florida | 24 June 2010
Using the world’s largest optical telescope, a team of University of Florida astronomers has pioneered a new method of observing planets outside our solar system. The method suggests that large Earth-based telescopes could play a leading role in rapidly accelerating research on “extrasolar” planets.

The results obtained from the Gran Telescopio Canarias, a telescope in Spain’s Canary Islands partially owned by the University of Florida, are of such high precision that the astronomers are already planning to use the technique to learn more about “super-Earth-sized” planets – larger than Earth but smaller than Neptune – that have already been identified by space-based observatories.

The astronomers used the technique to study two giant, previously discovered planets passing in front of their parent stars. It minimized the atmosphere’s distortion of starlight by measuring the light received within a small range of colors. The tunable filters of the Spanish-built instrument OSIRIS, the first instrument to be mounted on the Gran Telescopio Canarias, or GTC, allowed the spectrum to be “dissected” precisely.
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Ford said the new technique does not replace existing methods to search for planets, but rather provides new information about planets that pass in front of their parent stars, and have already been discovered by other observatories such as NASA’s Kepler space telescope. Its main virtue is that it provides better measurements of the planets’ orbits and the chemical composition of their atmospheres.

Given the growing number of extrasolar planets being detected, the researchers are confident this new technique will be a powerful new tool for learning about distant planets and how they differ from Earth.

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