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University of Graz Natural sciences News Ferne Sterne: Grazer Astrophysiker:innen testeten neuen Spektrografen PLATOSpec in Chile
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Friday, 20 December 2024

Distant stars: Graz astrophysicists test new PLATOSpec spectrograph in Chile

section of the Milky Way in the southern sky ©Cavan - stock.adobe.com

The Milky Way – here a section of the southern sky – contains around 200 billion stars in addition to our sun. Photo: A. Fujii

A few weeks ago, the new, high-resolution PLATOSpec spectrograph was installed on the 1.52-meter telescope at the European Southern Observatory in La Silla, Chile. It is now delivering its first data, the so-called "first light". This will allow researchers, including astrophysicists from the University of Graz, to look even more clearly into the universe. The aim is to observe exoplanets and the stars around which they orbit.

Martin Leitzinger and Petra Odert, astrophysicists at the University of Graz, spent almost two weeks at the European Southern Observatory (ESO) in Chile testing PLATOSpec and recording initial data with the new spectrograph. It was shown that the high-resolution instrument on the ESO 1.52-metre telescope fully meets expectations and thus also further improves research conditions for the Graz-based scientists. The tests were carried out together with Robert Greimel, owner of the company of the same name for scientific software development, data analysis and instrumentation, and with the PLATOSpec consortium.

The University of Graz is a cooperation partner in this consortium, led by Petr Kabáth, a researcher at the Astronomical Institute of the Czech Academy of Sciences in Ondrejov, through a project funded by the Austrian Science Fund FWF. "In our project, we are focusing on the search and characterisation of particularly strong high-energy outbreaks of radiation – so-called Superflares – on Sun-like stars. At the same time, we are interested in their possible effects on the atmospheres of exoplanets, i.e. planets outside our solar system that orbit around these stars," Martin Leitzinger reports.

"In order to observe superflares spectroscopically, we need access to a telescope and an instrument that is sufficiently sensitive to detect the superflares. Furthermore, the search for these events is very time-consuming," explains Petra Odert. "For the current FWF project, more than 100 observing nights have been carried out at the European Southern Observatory so far. They have been provided to us by the Czech partner as part of the PLATOSpec project," says Leitzinger. During their observations, which took place before the new spectrograph was put into operation, the Graz-based astrophysicists discovered a multitude of flares and superflares on the young, active star AU Microscopii, which is orbited by at least three confirmed exoplanets. The research results were recently published in the British journal MNRAS.

The ESO 1.52-metre telescope was decommissioned in 2002 and refurbished in 2022. "The installation of PLATOSpec in 2024 laid the foundation for the renewed scientific use of one of ESO's longest-serving telescopes," says Leitzinger, emphasising the sustainable aspect of this project. PLATOSpec will support the ESA PLATO mission, scheduled for launch in 2026, from Earth. The focus is on the study of stars orbited by exoplanets. PLATOSpec will, among other things, characterise the activity of the central stars and measure the mass of the planets.

ESO press release

Publication
Odert, P., Leitzinger, M. , Greimel, R., Kabáth, P., Lipták, J., Heinzel, P., Karjalainen, R., Wollmann, J., Guenther, E.W., Skarka, M., Srba, J., Škoda, P., Frýda, J., Brahm, R., Vanzi, L., Janík, J.: 
Spectroscopic observations of flares and superflares on AU Mic, MNRAS, in press, 2024

fisheye view of the 1.52-metre telescope at ESO's La Silla Observatory in Chile, inside ©Zdeněk Bardon/ESO
Fisheye view of the 1.52-metre telescope at ESO's La Silla Observatory in Chile. Photo: Zdeněk Bardon/ESO
the La Silla Observatory in Chile from the outside ©ESO/J. Kupec
The La Silla Observatory is located 600 kilometres north of Santiago de Chile at an altitude of 2400 metres. Photo: ESO/J. Kupec
created by Gudrun Pichler

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How can pupils with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have positive learning experiences and improve their social skills? Researchers at the University of Graz are investigating how science experiments in group settings can contribute to this. Initial results from the project, which is funded by the Austrian Science Fund FWF, show that children react differently depending on the kind of neurodiversity, but that experimentation classes with the right setting definitely have potential. "Pupils with ASD can do more than is currently expected of them in many cases," says project leader Uwe Simon.

Sustainability Award 2024 for two projects of the University of Graz

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Bees under observation: University of Graz provides unprecedented insights into the hive

What is going on in the combs? How many eggs is the queen laying? How much honey is there? Autonomous robots and AI algorithms provide important data and high-resolution real-time images from inside a beehive. "As part of an international team, we have developed a game-changer technology for a new type of digitalised behavioural research," reports biologist Thomas Schmickl from the Artifical Life Lab at the University of Graz. The publication, which has just appeared as the cover story in the journal "Science Robotics", describes the wealth of information that can be obtained from this unique research facility.

Research for healthy aging: FWF funds Cluster of Excellence "MetAGE" with 18 million euros

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