National Centre of Competence in Research PlanetS
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Building high-fidelity spectrographs

While high resolution imaging has benefited tremendously from Adaptive Optics (AO) in the last decade (VLT NACO, SINFONI, MAD) and has allowed advances in the exoplanet field, radial velocity techniques have not. In the E-ELT area, it is now time to think the design of new radial velocity spectrographs together with an associated AO system that will allow to concentrate the starlight into a much smaller spot than when limited by the seeing and therefore will allow the fiber collecting the light to have a smaller core for the same light collecting efficiency.

Since the size of the input fiber essentially determines the size of the spectrograph, having a small fiber will allow to build smaller spectrographs that will be not only cheaper but also more stable thermo-mecanically.

In this sub-project,

 

Encircled Energy (EE) in a 0.3″ fiber for different AO parameters in colors. For comparison we present  seeing-limited performance with 0.9″ fiber (top white dashed line) and 0.3″ fiber (bottom white dashed line)

 

Observational tango reveals a Super-Earth

Observational tango reveals a Super-Earth

An international team, including researchers from the University of Geneva (UNIGE) and the National Research Centre PlanetS, announces the discovery of a new super-Earth around a star slightly cooler than our Sun. Once again, the high-precision spectrograph ESPRESSO – designed and developed under the direction of the UNIGE – has made this discovery possible. The […]

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Fantasy Basel 2025 – Call for volunteers

Fantasy Basel 2025 – Call for volunteers

Dear PlanetS members and associates, Once again, PlanetS will return to Fantasy Basel – the Swiss Comic-con – and we need you! This year marks the 30th anniversary of 51 Peg b discovery, so exoplanets will be our main focus! But rest assured that all of planetary sciences will be represented! The festival will be held […]

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This exoplanet’s extreme climate defies all models

This exoplanet’s extreme climate defies all models

WASP-121b is one of the most studied exoplanets. Known for its extreme conditions—such as clouds of metal vapor—it belongs to the category of ultra-hot Jupiters. To explore its mysteries, an international team of astronomers, including researchers from the University of Geneva’s (UNIGE) Department of Astronomy and the PlanetS National Research Center, combined observations from the […]

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