COROT
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| COROT | |
|---|---|
| General information | |
| Organization | CNES / ESA / others |
| Launch date | December 27, 2006 |
| Launch vehicle | Soyuz 2.1b |
| Mass | 630 kg |
| Type of orbit | Polar |
| Orbit height | 827 km |
| Telescope style | Afocal |
| Diameter | 27 cm |
COROT (COnvection ROtation and planetary Transits) is a space mission led by the French Space Agency (CNES) in conjunction with the European Space Agency (ESA) and other international partners. The mission has two objectives: to search for extrasolar planets, particularly those of large terrestrial size, and to perform asteroseismology by measuring solar-like oscillations in stars. It was launched at 14:28 GMT on December 27, 2006, atop a Soyuz 2.1b carrier rocket[1][2] and reported first light on January 18, 2007[3]. It is the first mission of its kind. It detected its first extrasolar planet, COROT-Exo-1b, in May 2007.
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[edit] Overview
COROT consists of a 27 cm (10.6 inch) diameter afocal telescope with an array of spectroscopic detectors. The satellite, built in the Cannes Mandelieu Space Center, has a launch mass of 630 kg, is 4.10 metres long, 1.984 metres in diameter and is powered by two solar panels [4]. A Russian Soyuz 2-1B rocket lifted the satellite into a circular polar orbit with an altitude of 827 km on 27 December 2006. The first scientific observation campaign started on February 3, 2007[5].
Over its planned 2½ year mission it will observe perpendicular to its orbital plane, meaning there will be no Earth occultations, allowing 150 days of continuous observation. During the northern summer it will observe in an area around Serpens Cauda and during the winter it will observe in Monoceros. During the remaining 30 days between the two main observation periods, COROT will observe 5 other patches of sky.
The probe will monitor the brightness of stars, watching for the slight dimming that happens in regular intervals when planets transit their primary sun. COROT will be sensitive enough to detect rocky planets several times larger than Earth; it is also expected to discover new gas giants, which currently comprise almost all of the known extrasolar planets.
COROT will also undertake asteroseismology. It can detect luminosity variations associated with acoustic pulsations of stars. This phenomenon allows calculation of a star's precise mass, age and chemical composition and will aid in comparisons between the sun and other stars.
In each field of view there will be one main target star for the asteroseismology as well as up to nine other targets. Simultaneously, it will be recording the brightness of 120,000 stars brighter than apparent magnitude 15.5 for the extrasolar planet study. It is expected that a few dozen planets will be found as a result of this project.
[edit] Potential
Before the beginning of the mission, the team stated with caution that COROT would only be able to detect planets a few times to several times larger than Earth and that it was not specifically designed to detect habitable planets (it would instead assess their potential for habitability). According to the press release announcing the first results, COROT's instruments are performing with higher precision than had been predicted, and may be able to find planets down to the size of Earth.[6]
COROT should be assumed to only detect a small percentage of planets within its detection range due to the low percentage of existing planets that would likely make transits from the angle of observation from our Solar System. Expectations are that any planetary systems detected within a suitable range for further observations will be followed up by the future Darwin and Terrestrial Planet Finder spacecrafts or other projects like Kepler (NASA), New Worlds Mission, or Space Interferometry Mission.
[edit] Discoveries
On May 3, 2007, it was reported that COROT had discovered a 'hot Jupiter' COROT-Exo-1b orbiting a sun-like star 1,500 light years away. This planet has a radius approximately 1.78 times that of Jupiter, a mass approximately 1.3 times that of Jupiter, and orbits its parent star once every 1.5 days.[7][8] On the 300th day of operations ESA reported that "CoRoT is discovering exo-planets at a rate only set by the available resources to follow up the detections".[9] On December 20, 2007, additional results were published, declaring that a second exoplanet, COROT-Exo-2b had been discovered, this time with a radius 1.4 times and a mass 3.5 times that of Jupiter. The orbital period is less than two days. Results on asteroseismology were published in the same press release.[10] Three papers describing the two exoplanets, with radial-velocity follow-up, appeared in Astronomy and Astrophysics around Easter 2008 [1] [2] [3].
In May 2008, findings of two new exoplanets, as well as an unknown celestial object COROT-Exo-3b were announced by ESA. COROT-Exo-3b appears to be "something between a brown dwarft and a planet." In addition COROT has detected a faint signal, which could be another exoplanet with a radius as small as 1.7 Earth's radius. The existence of this object, which could be a rocky exoplanet, has not been confirmed yet. [11]
[edit] See also
- Kepler Space Observatory, another space mission to discover planets by transits.
- Eddington mission, now cancelled, was to have been a followup mission
[edit] References
- ^ COROT News
- ^ Spaceflight Now | Tracking Station | Worldwide launch schedule
- ^ COROT sees first light - physicsworld.com
- ^ COROT Satellite
- ^ First scientific observations by Corot. (in French)
- ^ "COROT discovers its first exoplanet and catches scientists by surprise", ESA, May 3, 2007.
- ^ ESA (2007-05-03). COROT discovers its first exoplanet and catches scientists by surprise. ESA Portal. Retrieved on 2008-01-07.
- ^ CNRS (2007-05-03). Succès des premières observations du satellite Corot. Espace Presse. Retrieved on 2008-01-07. (French)
- ^ COROT: 300 days in orbit. The Extrasolar Planets Encyclopaedia. Retrieved on 2008-01-07.
- ^ ESA. COROT surprises a year after launch. ESA Space Science. Retrieved on 2008-01-07.
- ^ ESA. Exoplanet hunt update. ESA Space Science. Retrieved on 2008-05-23.
[edit] External links
- COROT Mission
- CNES Corot page
- COROT page at the Astronomical Observatory in Marseille-Provence
- ESA COROT page
- COROT Mission Profile by NASA's Solar System Exploration
- http://www.cnes.fr/html/_455_465_3820_.php
- Europe goes searching for rocky planets - spaceref.com
- Soyuz 2-1B launches with COROT
- Space telescope to hunt planets - BBC News
- Mission log

