Australian Sky & Telescope

Fifty new planets found in the neighbourhood

ASTRONOMERS DESIGNED the CARMENES program to find Earth-size planets in their stars’ habitable zones. And it has delivered. Since it came online in 2016, it has resulted in a flurry of exciting results

The CARMENES consortium is celebrating its first five years of operations with the publication of visible-light measurements for more than 350 stars. In these results, the collaboration announced 33 new planets, 26 confirmed

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Australian Sky & Telescope

Australian Sky & Telescope2 min read
Star Caught Swallowing A Planet
The dinner bell has struck for a star in the constellation Aquila, the Eagle. Reporting in the May 4 issue of Nature, Kishalay De (MIT) and a team of astronomers watched the star belch and brighten in a way that suggests it swallowed a closely orbiti
Australian Sky & Telescope3 min read
Fold Your Dob In Half
ONE OF THE GREAT advantages of John Dobson’s telescope design is that it enables amateur astronomers to build big telescopes. New Zealand ATM Hamish Barker went that route some years ago with a 20cm f/6 scope that he admits was “unpopular with my wif
Australian Sky & Telescope1 min read
Going All Deep And Meaningful
READING THE ARTICLES in this issue about Williamina Fleming and E.E. Barnard, has made me reflect on how much we owe to these and other giants of the astronomy world, now long since gone. This holds true for all aspects of astrophysics — e.g. planeta

Related Books & Audiobooks