Skip to Content

Search: {{$root.lsaSearchQuery.q}}, Page {{$root.page}}

ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM <br> Hot on the Trail of Warm Planets Orbiting Cool Stars

  1. All News & Features
  2. All Events
    1. Archived Events
      1. 2013
      2. 2012
      3. 2011
      4. 2010
      5. 2009
      6. 2008
      7. 2007
      8. 2006
      9. 2005
      10. 2003
      11. 2002
      12. 2001
      13. 2000
      14. 1999
      15. HEP Astro
      16. Astronomy Colloquium
        1. <b>ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM</b><br>Tracing the Cosmic Shutdown of Star Formation in Massive Galaxies
        2. <b>ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM</b><br>The Effects of Magnetic Field Morphology on the Determination of Oxygen and Iron Abundances in the Solar Photosphere
        3. <b>ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM</b><br>Star Formation Across Space
        4. <b>ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM</b><br>Lonely Galaxies: The Baryon Content of Isolated Dwarf Galaxies
        5. <b>ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM</b><br>Choose Your Own Adventure: Multiplicity of Planets Among the Smallest Stars
        6. <b>ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM</b><br>Why the Invisible Reservoir of Gas Around Galaxies Counts in Galaxy Evolution
        7. <b>ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM</b><br>A Galaxy-Scale Fountain of Cold Molecular Gas Pumped by a Black Hole
        8. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM
        9. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Better Living Through Computation: Exploring the First Generations of Galaxies with Large-Scale Simulations
        10. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>The Search for Earth 2.0
        11. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>The Fast and Furious Lives of High Velocity Clouds
        12. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Supernovae as Drivers of Dust Evolution in Galaxies
        13. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>How to Measure the Composition of Planet-Forming Material
        14. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Direct Imaging of Extrasolar Planets and the Gemini Planet Imager
        15. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Blowing in the Quasar Wind: Feedback from Black Hole Outflows in Major Galaxy Mergers
        16. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Magellan/MDM Colloquium: Department Members Share Their Current Work Using Magellan/MDM Observatories
        17. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>The Fisk-Vanderbilt Masters-to-PhD Bridge Program: A Model for Increasing Diversity at the PhD Level in Physics & Astronomy
        18. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Science, Symphony, and the Northern Lights
        19. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Observing the Formation of Planetary Diversity
        20. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Lies, Damned Lies, and Statistics: Empirical Constraints on Theories of Planet Formation
        21. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Black People in Astronomy: Why So Few?
        22. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM <br> Hot on the Trail of Warm Planets Orbiting Cool Stars
        23. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Galaxy Clusters as Cosmological and Astrophysical Probes
        24. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM <br> Discovery of a Thorne-Zytkow Object Candidate in The Small Magellanic Cloud
        25. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Where's the Matter? (Tales from the Milky Way's Destructive Past)
        26. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Measuring the Mass-Radius Relation of Neutron Stars
        27. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM <br> Accretion Disk Outbursts: MHD Simulations (Finally) Confront Reality
        28. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM <br> The Observability of Recoiling Black Holes as Offset Quasars
        29. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Black Hole Masses in Active Galaxies
        30. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Using Multiwavelength Variability Studies to Probe the Disk-Jet Connection of Fermi Blazars
        31. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>X-ray Reverberation Mapping in AGN
        32. 3rd Annual Astronomy Undergraduate Poster Session
        33. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>High-Energy-Density Astrophysics in the Laboratory
        34. SPECIAL ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Ralph Baldwin Prize in Astrophysics and Space Sciences<br>Lonely Massive Stars</br>
        35. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Live Fast Die Young: The Evolution of Massive Stars towards their Death</br>
        36. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Watching a Little Gas Cloud on its Way into the Galactic Supermassive Black Hole
        37. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Dwarf Galaxies as Cosmological Probes
        38. SPECIAL ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>The Magellan and MDM Observatories / Michigan Astronomy
        39. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Seeing Worlds in Grains of Sand
        40. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Mohler Prize Lecture<br>Lighting up the Universe: Witnessing Cosmic Dawn</br>
        41. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>The ALFALFA Census of Gas-Bearing Galaxies at z=0</br>
        42. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Accretion Disk Outbursts: MHD Simulations (Finally) Confront Reality
        43. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>3D Spectroscopy of Giant H II Regions in Nearby Spiral Galaxies</br>
        44. ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM<br>Star Clusters and High Mass X-Ray Binaries in Nearby Spirals, Mergers, and Starburst Galaxies
        45. PUBLIC ASTRONOMY DISTINGUISHED ALUMNUS COLLOQUIUM | Cracking the Cosmic Code
        46. ASTRONOMY DISTINGUISHED ALUMNUS COLLOQUIUM
      17. Biophysics Seminar
      18. CM - AMO Seminars
      19. CM Theory Seminars
      20. Complex Systems
      21. Department Colloquia
      22. Quantitative Biology Seminars
      23. HET Brown Bag Series
      24. HET Seminars
      25. Life After Grad School Seminars
      26. Farrand Memorial Lecture
      27. Workshops & Conferences
      28. Miscellaneous
      29. Saturday Morning Physics
      30. Special Lectures
      31. Search Events
  3. Special Lectures
  4. K-12 Programs
  5. Saturday Morning Physics
  6. Seminars & Colloquia
Thursday, December 4, 2014
12:00 AM
411 West Hall

Just three years ago the prospect of finding temperate, rocky worlds around other stars was still the subject of science fiction: none had been found and reasonable estimates put us years or decades away from such a momentous discovery. All of that has changed very recently on the heels of the extraordinarily successful NASA Kepler mission. By searching for the tiny diminutions of starlight indicative of an eclipsing planet, Kepler has produced thousands of new planet candidates orbiting distant stars. Careful statistical analyses have shown that the majority of these candidates are bona fide planets, and the number of planets increases sharply toward Earth-sized bodies. Even more remarkably, many of these planets are orbiting right “next door,” around tiny red dwarf stars. I will describe our multi-telescope campaign to validate and characterize these tiny planetary systems, and present some early, exciting results that point the way to the first detection of the first Earth-sized planets in the habitable zones of nearby stars.

Speaker: