Bell Lecture
The Search For 100 Earths
Department of Astronomy Yale University
The search for exoplanets is motivated by the question of whether life
exists elsewhere. This drives our interest in the detection of planets that
are similar to our own world: rocky planets with the potential for liquid
surface water and plate tectonics; worlds that might harbor life that we
can recognize. Importantly, we will need to discover not just a few, but
hundreds of these worlds to eventually gain a statistical understanding of
whether life is rare, common, or ubiquitous and ground-based telescopes offer
an ideal platform for carrying out decade-long surveys. It is critical for
follow-up studies (imaging, atmospheric studies) that these planets orbit
nearby stars. In this talk, I will discuss how we plan to take what we've
learned and push on to the next frontier: our plans for a next generation
spectrograph, EXPRES, to carry out a search 100 Earths with the Discovery
Channel Telescope.
Friday, March 13th 2015, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, Keys Auditorium (room 112)
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