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Teenagers at Keele University Discover Possible New Exoplanet
by Staff Writers
Keele UK (SPX) Jul 06, 2016


File image.

Twenty four students in years 10, 11 and 12, boys and girls aged 15 to 17, from local schools and colleges came together for the week in the Lennard-Jones building at Keele to work on a research project that aimed to discover exoplanets - planets that orbit other stars - and to characterize eclipsing stellar binary systems.

The highlight of their week at Keele has been the discovery of at least one new strong exoplanetary candidate - a Neptune-sized planet in a 19-day orbit around a Sun-like star.

The potential planet orbits a star, much like the Sun, that is about 800 light-years away in the constellation of Virgo. The star was previously an anonymous object, about 100 times fainter than you could see with the naked eye.

The results of their work are feeding into Keele's ongoing research into exoplanetary systems and binary stars, and some of the discoveries will be followed-up immediately next week by Professor Rob Jeffries [http://www.astro.keele.ac.uk/~rdj], of Keele's Astrophysics group, with spectroscopy at the 2.5-m Isaac Newton Telescope in the Canary Islands.

During this week, Professor Jeffries, Dr. Pierre Maxted and the Astrophysics group at Keele hosted "Project Tatooine."

A key focus of the project was to search for rare examples of "circumbinary exoplanets" - those planets that orbit around a double star, like the fictional Tatooine from the film "Star Wars."

The students carefully examined thousands of light curves: precise measurements of stellar brightness taken every 30 minutes over the course of 75 days by NASA's Kepler satellite observatory.

In teams, they characterized the light curves, identified eclipsing binary systems and searched for the elusive transit signals of orbiting exoplanets. They collated their results, produced a final report and delivered a presentation of their work to each other and the Astrophysics group.

Professor Jeffries said: "The project entailed the students rapidly assimilating a great deal of new knowledge about stellar variability and astrophysical measurements.

They also had to practice and improve many transferable skills: team building, time management, information retrieval, communication and presentation, computing and problem solving. They also had the opportunity to visit the observatory at Keele University."


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Water is necessary for life as we know it, but too much water is bad for habitability. Therefore, to study the habitability of extrasolar planets, determining the abundance of water is a key element. Yann Alibert, Science Officer of PlanetS at the University of Bern, shows that the observation of exoplanets at different ages can be used to set statistical constraints on their water content - an ... read more


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