 

#  "The Tierras Observatory is nearing first light" 

 





January 04, 2021

 

 

 An exciting update on the Origins grant funded award project *Tierras* within the Charbonneau Group:

 The construction of a new camera for The *Tierras* Observatory is well underway at Cambridge Discovery Park, the Center for Astrophysics (CfA) | Harvard &amp; Smithsonian laboratory located near the Alewife T Stop in Cambridge, Massachusetts. *Tierras* will be an ultra-precise facility dedicated to discovering terrestrial planets around nearby small stars (which astronomers dub “M-dwarfs”), as well as moons and rings of planets outside the Solar System. Our camera will triple the field of view of the telescope, allowing us to observe more stars, and employ a custom filter to desensitize our observations from atmospheric effects known to limit ground-based observations of M-dwarfs. We are currently assembling the optics that make up the *Tierras* camera in the lab, as can be seen in the time-lapse below. The *Tierras* project is led by Juliana García-Mejía, a fourth year graduate student at the CfA. She is advised by David Charbonneau, who is a professor in the Harvard Astronomy Department. *Tierras* will begin science operations in early 2021.

 Caption for time-lapse: Juliana García-Mejía and engineers Joseph Zajac &amp; Robert Fata can be seen inside the clean room inspecting one of the four *Tierras* lenses, and consequently installing it inside an aluminum bezel.



 

 

 



 

 See also:- [ 2020 ](/years/2020)
 
 

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