"Small Planets, Small Stars"

Speaker: 
Ian Crossfield
Institution: 
Univ. of Arizona
Date: 
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Time: 
4:00 pm
Location: 
NS2 1201
 

 
ABSTRACT:

Small stars and small planets are ubiquitous in the Galaxy. Planets smaller than ~2.5 Earth radii occur more frequently than any other type of planet; stars with masses below ~0.4 Solar masses are the most common type of star. Nonetheless we know much less about the formation, evolution, interior composition, atmospheric makeup, and population trends of M dwarf planetary systems than we do for planets orbiting Sunlike stars. I will review our work to shed further light on the matter, including my team's large HST survey of transiting super-Earth atmospheres and our search for new, small planets transiting M dwarfs using NASA's new "K2" mission. These projects provide the foundation necessary to enable many future exoplanet observations with JWST and TMT.

 

 

Host: 
Michael Cooper