Bibcode
Sozzetti, A.; Afonso, C.; Alonso, R.; Blank, D. L.; Catala, C.; Deeg, H.; Grenfell, J. L.; Hellier, C.; Latham, D. W.; Minniti, D.; Pont, F.; Rauer, H.
Bibliographical reference
Pathways Towards Habitable Planets, proceedings of a workshop held 14 to 18 September 2009 in Barcelona, Spain. Edited by Vincent Coudé du Foresto, Dawn M. Gelino, and Ignasi Ribas. San Francisco: Astronomical Society of the Pacific, p.45
Advertised on:
10
2010
Citations
3
Refereed citations
0
Description
Transiting planet systems offer a unique opportunity to observationally
constrain proposed models of the interiors (radius, composition) and
atmospheres (chemistry, dynamics) of extrasolar planets. The spectacular
successes of ground-based transit surveys (more than 60 transiting
systems known to-date) and the host of multi-wavelength,
spectro-photometric follow-up studies, carried out in particular by HST
and Spitzer, have paved the way to the next generation of transit search
projects, which are currently ongoing (CoRoT, Kepler), or planned. The
possibility of detecting and characterizing transiting Earth-sized
planets in the habitable zone of their parent stars appears
tantalizingly close. In this contribution we briefly review the power of
the transit technique for characterization of extrasolar planets,
summarize the state of the art of both ground-based and space-borne
transit search programs, and illustrate how the science of planetary
transits fits within the Blue Dots perspective.