Announcements of Opportunity
SURF: Announcements of Opportunity
Below are Announcements of Opportunity posted by Caltech faculty and JPL technical staff for the SURF program. Each AO indicates whether or not it is open to non-Caltech students. If an AO is NOT open to non-Caltech students, please DO NOT contact the mentor. Announcements of Opportunity are posted as they are received. Please check back regularly for new AO submissions!
Remember: This is just one way that you can go about identifying a suitable project and/or mentor. Click here for more tips on finding a mentor. Announcements for external summer programs are listed here.
*Students applying for JPL projects should complete a SURF@JPL application instead of a "regular" SURF application.
*Students pursuing opportunities at JPL must be U.S. citizens or U.S. permanent residents.
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Project: | Searching for the Nearest Transiting Earth-like Expolanets | ||||||||
Disciplines: | Astronomy, Physics, Computer Science, Applied Math | ||||||||
Mentor: |
Stanimir Metchev,
Professor, (PMA),
smetchev@uwo.ca, |
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Mentor URL: | https://physics.uwo.ca/people/faculty_web_pages/metchev.html (opens in new window) | ||||||||
Background: |
NOTE 1: This project is being offered by a Caltech alum and is open only to Caltech students. The project will be conducted at Western University in London, Ontario, Canada. NOTE 2: Western University hosts one of the largest astronomy research groups in Canada, with expertise from atmospheric meteors to exoplanets to active galactic nuclei. London, Ontario is within a 2-hour drive of Toronto, Detroit, or Niagara Falls, and within an hour drive to the beaches of Lake Huron or Lake Erie. Most of the 5000+ known extrasolar planets have been discovered with the "transit" technique: the observer is in a lucky position to detect the small dimming of the host star when an orbiting planet periodically passes in front. NASA's Kepler spacecraft discovered most of these. However, Kepler observed a small portion of the sky, so most known exoplanets reside around distant and dim stars. These present a challenge for characterization, even with NASA's James Webb Space Telescope. Dr. Metchev's team seeks a student to participate in a new approach to discover and characterize the nearest Earth-like exoplanets. |
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Description: | Prof. Metchev's team at Western University is involved in the planning for a space telescope mission, POET, that will be in part dedicated to discovering rocky planets around M-type or cooler dwarf stars. In preparation for POET, Prof. Metchev's team is assembling a catalogue of the nearest M-type or cooler (L or T types) stars, analyzing their properties from TESS observations or with ground-based telescopes. Potential follow-up observations are also possible with an array of three 50 cm robotic telescopes. The student will use publicly available (AstroImageJ software or astropy library) or custom-developed software to analyze astronomical imaging or time series data, whether from TESS or from the three 50 cm telescopes. The student may also design and obtain ground-based observations using the Maxim DL and ACP astronomy imaging and control software. | ||||||||
References: | https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2022SPIE12180E..0AR/abstract | ||||||||
Student Requirements: | The successful applicant will have strong computing skills, including knowledge of the Linux operating system and of a scripting/programming language (python, C). Basic astronomy knowledge, familiarity with astronomical images, telescope use, or knowledge of parallel computing or machine learning are all preferred, but not required. | ||||||||
Programs: |
This AO can be done under the following programs:
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