1. PLATO: the ESA mission for exo-planets discovery
- Author
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Mario Salatti, Simonetta Chinellato, C. Catala, Willy Benz, Matteo Burresi, Enrico Battistelli, Steve Rockstein, Giordano Bruno, Matteo Munari, Giampaolo Piotto, Federico Biondi, M. Marinai, Maria Bergomi, Maximilian Klebor, Stefano Basso, Elisa Portaluri, Daniele Piazza, Martin Pertenais, Valerio Nascimbeni, T. Bandy, Riccardo Bardazzi, Anders Erikson, Emanuele Capuano, Anko Börner, Virginie Cessa, Simone Pirrotta, Andrea Novi, Mauro Ghigo, Isabella Pagano, Filippo Marliani, Marco Dima, Flavia Calderone, Daniela Sicilia, Juan Cabrera, Heike Rauer, Alexis Brandeker, Ana M. Heras, Mathias Brändli, M. Schweitzer, Roberto Ragazzoni, Davide Greggio, Valery Mogulsky, Martin Rieder, Luca Marafatto, Valentina Viotto, M. Wieser, Gisbert Peter, Thierry De Roche, E. Tommasi, Mauro Brotini, Demetrio Magrin, Gabriele Umbriaco, Jacopo Farinato, and Francesco Borsa
- Subjects
Cosmic Vision ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Aperture ,Field of view ,ESA medium size mission ,01 natural sciences ,Asteroseismology ,Transits ,law.invention ,Telescope ,law ,Planet ,0103 physical sciences ,Electronic ,Optical and Magnetic Materials ,ESA medium class mission ,Exoplanets ,PLATO ,Refractive design ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Applied Mathematics ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Physics ,Astrophysics::Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astronomy ,Exoplanet ,Stars ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
PLATO (PLAnetary Transits and Oscillation of stars) is the ESA Medium size dedicated to exo-planets discovery, adopted in the framework of the Cosmic Vision program. The PLATO launch is planned in 2026 and the mission will last at least 4 years in the Lagrangian point L2. The primary scientific goal of PLATO is to discover and characterize a large amount of exo-planets hosted by bright nearby stars, constraining with unprecedented precision their radii by mean of transits technique and the age of the stars through by asteroseismology. By coupling the radius information with the mass knowledge, provided by a dedicated ground-based spectroscopy radial velocity measurements campaign, it would be possible to determine the planet density. Ultimately, PLATO will deliver the largest samples ever of well characterized exo-planets, discriminating among their ‘zoology’. The large amount of required b right stars can be achieved by a relatively small aperture telescope (about 1 meter class) with a wide Field of View (about 1000 square degrees). The PLATO strategy is to split the collecting area into 24 identical 120 mm aperture diameter fully refractive cameras with partially overlapped Field of View delivering an overall instantaneous sky covered area of about 2232square degrees. The opto-mechanical sub-system of each camera, namely Telescope Optical Unit, is basically composed by a 6 lenses fully refractive optical system, presenting one aspheric surface on the front lens, and by a mechanical structure made in AlBeMet.
- Published
- 2018