Bibcode
Zapatero Osorio, Maria Rosa; Viel, Matteo; Vanzella, Eros; Toso, Giorgio; Tenegi, Fabio; Spanò, Paolo; Sousa, Sergio; Sosnowska, Danuta; Santin, Paolo; Santana Tschudi, Samuel; Riva, Marco; Rasilla, José Luis; Monteiro, Manuel; Molaro, Paolo; Moitinho, André; Martins, Carlos; Mannetta, Marco; Maire, Charles; Lovis, Christophe; Lizon, Jean-Louis; Lima, Jorge; Landoni, Marco; Iwert, Olaf; Kerber, Florian; Gomes, Ricardo; Gonzalez Hernandez, Jonay; Hughes, Ian; Fragoso, Ana; Genolet, Ludovic; Fleury, Michel; Delabre, Bernard; Figueira, Pedro; D'Odorico, Valentina; De Caprio, Vincenzo; Coretti, Igor; Cupani, Guido; Conconi, Paolo; Coelho, João.; Comari, Maurizio; Cirami, Roberto; Carvas, Pedro; Broeg, Christopher; Bristow, Paul; Baldini, Veronica; Avila, Gerardo; Affolter, Michael; Abreu, Manuel; Dekker, Hans; Santos, Nuno C.; Rebolo, Rafael; Pepe, Francesco; Cristiani, Stefano; Di Marcantonio, Paolo; Amate, Manuel; Zerbi, Filippo M.; Cabral, Alexandre; Mégevand, Denis
Referencia bibliográfica
Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy IV. Proceedings of the SPIE, Volume 8446, id. 84461R-84461R-15 (2012).
Fecha de publicación:
9
2012
Número de citas
14
Número de citas referidas
7
Descripción
ESPRESSO, the VLT rocky exoplanets hunter, will combine the efficiency
of modern echelle spectrograph with extreme radial-velocity precision.
It will be installed at Paranal on ESO's VLT in order to achieve a gain
of two magnitudes with respect to its predecessor HARPS, and the
instrumental radial-velocity precision will be improved to reach 10 cm/s
level. We have constituted a Consortium of astronomical research
institutes to fund, design and build ESPRESSO on behalf of and in
collaboration with ESO, the European Southern Observatory. The project
has passed the preliminary design review in November 2011. The
spectrograph will be installed at the so-called "Combined Coudé
Laboratory" of the VLT, it will be linked to the four 8.2 meters Unit
Telescopes (UT) through four optical "Coudé trains" and will be
operated either with a single telescope or with up to four UTs. In
exchange of the major financial and human effort the building Consortium
will be awarded with guaranteed observing time (GTO), which will be
invested in a common scientific program. Thanks to its characteristics
and the ability of combining incoherently the light of 4 large
telescopes, ESPRESSO will offer new possibilities in many fields of
astronomy. Our main scientific objectives are, however, the search and
characterization of rocky exoplanets in the habitable zone of quiet,
near-by G to M-dwarfs, and the analysis of the variability of
fundamental physical constants. In this paper, we present the ambitious
scientific objectives, the capabilities of ESPRESSO, the technical
solutions for the system and its subsystems, enlightening the main
differences between ESPRESSO and its predecessors. The project aspects
of this facility are also described, from the consortium and partnership
structure to the planning phases and milestones.