For more than thirty years, radio astronomers have searched for auroral emission from exoplanets. With the Dutch radio telescope LOFAR we have recently detected strong, highly circularly polarised low-frequency (144 MHz) radio emission associated with a M-dwarf - the expected signpost of such radiation. The star itself is quiescent, with a 130-day rotation period and low X-ray luminosity. In this talk, I will detail how the radio properties of the detection imply that such emission is generated by the presence of an exoplanet in a short period orbit around the star. I will also discuss how our LOFAR observations represents the most comprehensive survey of stellar systems at low frequencies, and the implications of this new population we hav...
It is now a well-established fact that also very low mass stars harbor planetary systems. These star...
Thesis: Ph. D. in Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Earth, At...
International audienceContext. The detection of radio emissions from exoplanets will open up a vibra...
For more than thirty years, radio astronomers have searched for auroral emission from exoplanets. Wi...
For more than thirty years, radio astronomers have searched for auroral emission from exoplanets. Wi...
For more than thirty years, radio astronomers have searched for auroral emission from exoplanets. Wi...
International audienceThe detection of exoplanetary magnetic fields is one of the most elusive hunts...
© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited 2020Low-frequency (ν ≲ 150 MHz) ...
Coherent low-frequency (≲200 MHz) radio emission from stars encodes the conditions of the outer coro...
Low-frequency (ν ≲ 150 MHz) stellar radio emission is expected to originate in the outer corona at h...
Stellar magnetic fields drive a wide range of energetic phenomena, which have a crucial influence on...
Radio observations are excellent probes of supra-thermal charges and magnetic fields in the coronae/...
The majority of searches for radio emission from exoplanets have to date focused on short period pla...
It is now a well-established fact that also very low mass stars harbor planetary systems. These star...
Thesis: Ph. D. in Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Earth, At...
International audienceContext. The detection of radio emissions from exoplanets will open up a vibra...
For more than thirty years, radio astronomers have searched for auroral emission from exoplanets. Wi...
For more than thirty years, radio astronomers have searched for auroral emission from exoplanets. Wi...
For more than thirty years, radio astronomers have searched for auroral emission from exoplanets. Wi...
International audienceThe detection of exoplanetary magnetic fields is one of the most elusive hunts...
© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited 2020Low-frequency (ν ≲ 150 MHz) ...
Coherent low-frequency (≲200 MHz) radio emission from stars encodes the conditions of the outer coro...
Low-frequency (ν ≲ 150 MHz) stellar radio emission is expected to originate in the outer corona at h...
Stellar magnetic fields drive a wide range of energetic phenomena, which have a crucial influence on...
Radio observations are excellent probes of supra-thermal charges and magnetic fields in the coronae/...
The majority of searches for radio emission from exoplanets have to date focused on short period pla...
It is now a well-established fact that also very low mass stars harbor planetary systems. These star...
Thesis: Ph. D. in Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Earth, At...
International audienceContext. The detection of radio emissions from exoplanets will open up a vibra...