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PLV: Plenarvorträge
PLV V
PLV V: Plenarvortrag
Dienstag, 17. März 2020, 08:30–09:15, HSZ 01
Thousands of New Worlds: How to characterize Habitable Worlds and find signs of life — •Lisa Kaltenegger — Carl Sagan Institute Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA
The detection of exoplanets orbiting other stars has revolutionized our view of the cosmos. First results suggest that it is teeming with a fascinating diversity of rocky planets, including those in the habitable zone. Even our closest star, Proxima Centauri, harbors a small planet in its habitable zone, Proxima b.
With the next generation of telescopes, we will be able to peer into the atmospheres of rocky planets and get a glimpse into other worlds. Using our own planet and its wide range of biota as a Rosetta stone, we explore how we could detect habitability and signs of life on exoplanets over interstellar distances. Current telescopes are not yet powerful enough to characterize habitable exoplanets, but the next generation of telescopes that is already being built will have the capabilities to characterize close-by habitable worlds.
This talk will present and discuss the latest results, the challenges of how to identify and characterize such habitable worlds, and how near-future telescopes will revolutionize the field. For the first time in human history, we have developed the technology to detect potentially habitable worlds. Finding thousands of exoplanets has taken the field of comparative planetology beyond the Solar System.