DocumentCode
1313494
Title
Are We “Waiting for Godot”? [Microwave Surfing]
Author
Bansal, Rajeev
Author_Institution
University of Connecticut, 371 Fairfield Way, Unit 2157, Storrs, Connecticut 06269-2157, USA.
Volume
11
Issue
6
fYear
2010
Firstpage
14
Lastpage
16
Abstract
Over the last three centuries, there have been many advances in optical telescopes. To find planets that may support life like our own planet, astronomers have to search for planets that orbit stars at the “Goldilocks” distance, not so close that they will be unbearably hot Jupiters and not so far away that they will be frozen Plutos. Locating objects within the bright glare of a host star is no easy task. But, as reported in a recent paper [1], [2] in Nature by a Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) group, scientists have made tremendous progress in the field. The JPL group used wavefront correction techniques applied to coronagraphs to observe optically a planet orbiting its host 33 light years away with a relatively small (1.5 m) earth-based telescope.
Keywords
Astronomy; Extraterrestrial measurements; Extraterrestrial phenomena;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Microwave Magazine, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1527-3342
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MMM.2010.937723
Filename
5564382
Link To Document