Das Institut für Physik - Fachbereich Astrophysik und Geophysik - lädt zu folgendem Vortrag im Rahmen des Astrophysikalischen Kolloquiums ein:
Prof. Dr. Andrew Cameron
University of St. Andrews, Scotland (UK)
“The Sun as a star seen through planet hunting instruments”
Despite spectacular advances in the stability and precision of radial-velocity spectrometers over the last 3 decades, the detection threshold for the reflex orbital motion of planet-host stars has been stalled at around 1 m/s for the last 15 years. This is an order of magnitude greater than is needed for determining the masses of Earth analogues around solar-type stars. The culprit is stellar activity, whose forms range from p-modes and photospheric granulation to Doppler-shifted flux perturbations by dark spots and bright faculae, to localised magnetic suppression of convective flows at different depths in the photosphere. A small, purpose-built solar telescope has been feeding integrated sunlight into the HARPS-N radial-velocity spectrometer every clear day since July 2015. I will review a selection of the ongoing investigations that are using these Sun-as-a-star data to develop both data-driven and physics-based methods for separating the effects of stellar photospheric physics from true dynamical Doppler shifts.
Zeit: Montag, 24. Februar 2025 um 14:00 Uhr s.t.
Ort: SR 05.13 (1. Stock) Universitätsplatz 5, 8010 Graz