Calendar

Mar
18
Tue
Riunione/Talk pubblico U. Becciani su futuro del CN HPC
Mar 18 @ 11:30 – 13:00
VIsita pomeridiana Prof.ssa Alice Tonelli (3466448710) della scuola Secondaria di Primo grado Don Bosco di Paderno Dugnano (MI).
Mar 18 @ 15:00 – 19:00
Mar
19
Wed
Visita Museo Istituto Mario Rutelli (2 classi)
Mar 19 @ 9:00 – 13:00

Visita del Museo in occasione di Light in Astronomy di due classi dell’Istituto Mario Rutelli, Prof.ssa Valeria Bulgarella. 2 turni:

primo turno: 1BLS 20 alunni e due docenti Filippone Rosamaria e Calagna Maura

secondo turno: 1AT 22 alunni e due docenti Antonino Piraino e Corso Francesca

Visita museo 4 pax Sergio Giammanco
Mar 19 @ 12:00 – 13:15
Visita al Museo
Mar 19 @ 15:00 – 16:00
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Mar
24
Mon
WORKSHOP CHINNICI LABORATORI
Mar 24 @ 9:00 – 20:00
Mar
25
Tue
WORKSHOP CHINNICI LABORATORI
Mar 25 @ 9:00 – 20:00
Mar
26
Wed
WORKSHOP CHINNICI LABORATORI
Mar 26 @ 9:00 – 20:00
Mar
27
Thu
WORKSHOP CHINNICI LABORATORI
Mar 27 @ 9:00 – 20:00
Seminario: Alex Thompson (UCL)
Mar 27 @ 15:00 – 17:00
Speaker: Alex Thompson (UCL)
Title: Probing Impacts of Stellar Variability within HST WFC3/STIS and Ariel Tier 2 and Tier 3 Observations with Activity Metrics
Abstract: Stellar activity produces two main diagnostics within low-resolution exoplanet transmission spectra. Its highly chromatic nature imparts trends in the underlying spectrum that become most noticeable at shorter wavelengths due to the increased contrast between the flux from the active regions (i.e. spots and/or faculae) and the quiet photosphere. The second characteristic is that activity is inherently time-variable, predominantly modulated by stellar rotation as active regions rotate into and out of view but also with contributions from longer timescales of evolution/decay and even long-term activity cycles e.g. maxima and minima (although certain configurations e.g. polar spots and active latitudes will be more resistant to this). This variability can reveal itself through subsequent observations of the system and is both useful and challenging; it can further help us to identify and constrain potential contamination but also means that observations at different epochs may require individual corrections before they can robustly be combined and analysed together which will become increasingly difficult for smaller planets as the SNR of each visit progressively decreases. In this seminar I will present how both diagnostics have been used with archival HST WFC3 and STIS datasets to create two new activity metrics that are highly complementary to existing indicators. I will also show preliminary results surrounding how this work is being extended to Tier 2 and Tier 3 Ariel simulations to explore how stellar variability will impact our ability to stack visits to obtain the required SNR for these tiers.