News
Rare-Earth metals in the atmosphere of a glowing-hot exoplanet
KELT-9 b is the hottest exoplanet known to date. In the summer of 2018, a joint team of astronomers from the universities of Bern and Geneva and members of PlanetS found signatures of gaseous iron and titanium in its atmosphere. Now these researchers have also been able to detect traces of vaporized sodium, magnesium, chromium, […]
Continue ReadingProjektsekretär/in 60%
PlanetS ist ein Nationaler Forschungsschwerpunkt der Schweiz, der sich mit der Erforschung von Planeten befasst. Für das Project Office des NCCR Projektes suchen wir: Eine/n Projektsekretär/in 60% (Mutterschaftsvertretung ab August 2019 bis Mitte Januar 2020) Hauptaufgaben: Entlastung des Institutsdirektors/Personalchefs in allen planerischen, organisatorischen und administrativen Belangen Organisation von Video- und Telefonkonferenzen und Sitzungen […]
Continue ReadingEPSC-DPS Joint Meeting 2019
The EPSC-DPS Joint Meeting 2019 covers a broad area of science topics related to planetary science and planetary missions. The event falls from 15 and 20 of September 2019 and it is a joint meeting of the European Planetary Science Congress and the Division for Planetary Sciences of the American Astronomical Society. The programme of […]
Continue ReadingFantasy Basel: We were there
PlanetS was at the Fantasy Basel! And talked about many things with you!
Continue ReadingHD 114762
HD 114762 is an extrasolar system located 126 ligh-years away in the constellation of Coma Berenices. It is made of two stars and a substellar companion discovered 30 years ago this month. In this animation are represented the primary star (at the center) and the substellar companion (in orbit). The secondary star, much farther away, […]
Continue ReadingFive planets revealed after 20 years of observation
A team of astronomers led by members of PlanetS has discovered five new planets with periods of revolution between 15 and 40 years. It took 20 years of regular observations to achieve this result. Over 4000 exoplanets have been discovered since the first one in 1995, but the vast majority of them orbit their stars […]
Continue ReadingThe important role of La Silla
By Pierre Bratschi About 80 astronomers were invited by ESO to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the La Silla Observatory. An event that may seem anachronistic in the era of the VLT, the ELT, and of the JWST, indeed what else can we expect from an observatory that has “only” two “small” 3.6m telescopes? How can […]
Continue ReadingLa Silla, an observatory with a bright future
Since its inauguration in 1969, ESO’s La Silla Observatory has been at the forefront of astronomy. Its state-of-the-art instruments have enabled astronomers to make fundamental discoveries and paved the way for future generations of telescopes. After 50 years of activity, the La Silla Observatory remains a reference in the field and has recently been given […]
Continue ReadingThe surprising paths of astronomy
Many young researchers are concerned about their professional future. In the InsiderS newsletter, we introduce physicists who did not take the direct path to a professorship, but nevertheless made a successful career, like Stéphane Berthet, Vice-Rector of the University of Geneva. Stéphane Berthet was born in Geneva in 1960 and studied in the same city. […]
Continue Reading“Prepare and practice with passion”
Cécile Bastien Remy calls herself “Public Speaking Jedi – Trainer – Speaker”. At the 5th General Assembly of PlanetS she was invited to give a workshop. “If you are not in a general mindset of giving to your audience, your audience will feel it,” Cécile Bastien Remy says. Nadine Afram, PlanetS: If you could only give […]
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