Yorkshire Post

‘ Hunter’ telescope to study hundreds of planets

- CHARLES BROWN Email: yp. newsdesk@ ypn. co. uk Twitter: @ yorkshirep­ost

THE EUROPEAN Space Agency ( ESA) has given the green light to the world’s first space telescope – dubbed the planet hunter – to study the atmosphere­s of planets outside our solar system.

The telescope’s mission is to look at the links between a planet’s chemistry and its environmen­t by charting approximat­ely 1,000 known planets outside our own solar system: known as exoplanets.

The informatio­n will provide scientists with a full picture of what exoplanets are made of, how they were formed and how they will evolve.

The Atmospheri­c Remotesens­ing Infrared Exoplanet Large- survey ( Ariel) has undergone a rigorous review process throughout 2020 and is due for launch in 2029.

With funding from the UK Space Agency ( UKSA), UK research institutio­ns – including UCL, Cardiff University and the University of Oxford – are playing a critical role in the mission by providing leadership, contributi­ng expertise, vital hardware and software, and shaping its goals.

The Science and Technology Facilities Council’s ( STFC) RAL Space, Technology Department and UK Astronomy Technology Centre have also offered essential support.

Once in orbit, Ariel will also share its data with the general public, inviting space enthusiast­s and budding astronomer­s to use the data to help select targets and characteri­se stars around which planets orbit.

The instrument­s aboard the observator­y will study the light that filters through a planet’s atmosphere as it passes across the face of its host star, revealing chemical fingerprin­ts of gases that shroud such stars.

The instrument­s will also try to

refine estimates of a planet’s temperatur­e.

Ariel will be able to detect signs of well- known ingredient­s in the planets’ atmosphere­s such as water vapour, carbon dioxide and methane.

For a select number of planets, it will also perform a deep survey of their cloud systems and study seasonal and daily atmospheri­c variations.

Professor Giovanna Tinetti, principal investigat­or for Ariel from UCL, said: “We are the first generation capable of studying planets around other stars.

“Ariel will seize this unique opportunit­y and reveal the nature and history of hundreds of diverse worlds in our galaxy.

“We can now embark on the next stage of our work to make this mission a reality.”

Some 4,374 worlds have been confirmed in 3,234 systems since the first exoplanet discoverie­s in the early 1990s.

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