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![]() By Susanna Kohler for AAS Nova News Washington DC (SPX) Mar 17, 2016
One of the main goals of exoplanet surveys like the Kepler mission is to find potentially habitable planets orbiting other stars. Finding planets in a star's habitable zone, however, is easier when we know in advance where to look! A recent study has provided us with a starting point.
Defining the Zone Knowing the parameters of the habitable zones around nearby stars is important for current and future exoplanet surveys, as this information allows them to identify stars with habitable zones that can be probed, given the survey's sensitivity. To provide this target selection tool, a team of scientists led by Colin Chandler (San Francisco State University) has created a catalog of the habitable zones of roughly 37,000 nearby, main-sequence stars.
Selecting for Sun-Like Stars The authors exclude giant stars and cool dwarfs, choosing to focus on main-sequence stars within the temperature range 2600-7200K, more similar to the Sun. They test their derived stellar parameters by comparing to observational data from the Exoplanet Data Explorer (EDE), where available, and confirm that their photometrically derived stellar parameters agree well with the parameters in EDE, typically measured spectroscopically.
Providing Survey Targets The authors also provide an estimate of how many of these habitable zones current surveys (like Kepler) and upcoming surveys (like the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, or TESS) will be able to probe, based on the duration of the surveys' typical campaigns. Though a planet's potential for habitability relies on additional factors besides the location of its orbit, cataloging the locations of stellar habitable zones for nearby, observable stars is an important start. CELESTA is an excellent reference for this, and it will provide a living resource that the authors plan to continue to update with additional stars, as well as with improved-accuracy stellar measurements, expected from upcoming astrometric missions. Citation: "The Catalog Of Earth-Like Exoplanet Survey Targets (Celesta): A Database Of Habitable Zones Around Nearby Stars" Colin Orion Chandler et al 2016 AJ 151 59. doi:10.3847/0004-6256/151/3/59
Related Links American Astronomical Society. Lands Beyond Beyond - extra solar planets - news and science Life Beyond Earth
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