National Centre of Competence in Research PlanetS
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CHEOPS launch set for 17 Dec. 2019

CHEOPS launch set for 17 Dec. 2019

The space telescope CHEOPS is scheduled to begin its journey into space on Tuesday, 17 December 2019 shortly before 10 a.m. CET. The Universities of Bern and Geneva are organizing events with a live stream from Kourou and space talks. “After over six years of intensive work, I am of course very pleased that the […]

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Studying exoplanetary atmospheres

Studying exoplanetary atmospheres

Chloe Fisher is a PhD student at the Center of Space and Habitability (CSH) and associate of the NCCR PlanetS. In a video produced by the International Office of the University of Bern she talks about her work and life in Bern. Chloe Fisher is originally from the United Kingdom. Her project at CSH is […]

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Lively discussions and a prize for a short film

Lively discussions and a prize for a short film

At the “Global Science Film Festival” in Bern and Zürich astrophysicists associated with PlanetS discussed a movie about an Indian Mars mission. The documentary “Bern on the Moon” was awarded the audience prize in the category short films. Susanne Wampfler, Professor at the Center for Space and Habitability (CSH) of the University of Bern, was […]

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“Fragile – collected, hunted, explored”

“Fragile – collected, hunted, explored”

Exhibition in Winterthur From 10 November 2019 to 15 March 2020, the Naturmuseum Winterthur is showing its award-winning special exhibition “Fragile – collected, hunted, researched”. The exhibition, produced by Naturama Aargau, deals with quirky collectors, tough explorers, eccentric hunters and tireless researchers. The exhibition space becomes a collection depot. Well protected, each freight box contains […]

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CHEOPS has arrived in Kourou

CHEOPS has arrived in Kourou

Last station before launch! The CHEOPS satellite has arrived by plane on 16 October 2019 at Europe’s Spaceport Kourou in French Guiana. Now CHEOPS is being prepared to launch into space soon with Soyuz VS23. Once in orbit around the Earth, it will begin to measure the exact radii of planets in distant solar systems […]

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Liquifying a rocky exoplanet

Liquifying a rocky exoplanet

A hot, molten Earth would be around 5% larger than its solid counterpart. This is the result of a study led by researchers at the University of Bern. The difference between molten and solid rocky planets is important for the search of Earth-like worlds beyond our Solar System and the understanding of Earth itself. Rocky […]

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A planet that should not exist

A planet that should not exist

Astronomers detected a giant planet orbiting a small star. The planet has much more mass than theoretical models predict. While this surprising discovery was made by a Spanish-German team, researchers at the University of Bern studied how the mysterious exoplanet might have formed. The red dwarf GJ 3512 is located 30 light-years from us. Although […]

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Hints of a volcanically active exomoon

Hints of a volcanically active exomoon

A rocky extrasolar moon (exomoon) with bubbling lava may orbit a planet 550 light-years away from us. This is suggested by an international team of researchers led by the University of Bern on the basis of theoretical predictions matching observations. The “exo-Io” would appear to be an extreme version of Jupiter’s moon Io. Jupiter’s moon […]

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Observing planets as they form

Observing planets as they form

By Christoph Mordasini Astrophysics – the branch of physics that aims at explaining astronomical observations – differs from most other branches of physics by the comparatively minor availability or sometimes even absence of laboratory experiments. While crucial laboratory experiments do exist for several physical systems and processes that are relevant in astrophysics and in particular […]

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