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Trans-Atlantic Exoplanet Survey
Cluster of telescopes that used the transit method to locate exoplanets From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Trans-Atlantic Exoplanet Survey, or TrES, used three 4-inch (10 cm) telescopes located at Lowell Observatory, Palomar Observatory, and Teide Observatory to locate exoplanets. It was made using the network of small, relatively inexpensive telescopes designed to look specifically for planets orbiting bright stars using the transit method. The array used 4-inch Schmidt telescopes having CCD cameras and automated search routines. The survey was created by David Charbonneau of the Center for Astrophysics, Timothy Brown of the National Center for Atmospheric Research, and Edward Dunham of Lowell Observatory.[1]
The TrES survey is no longer operational.
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Discoveries
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The TrES project discovered a total of five planets in its years of operation. All were discovered using the transit method. Note that the discovery papers do not use the "b" suffix typically used in extrasolar planet designations. While forms with and without the b are used in the literature, the table here uses the designations assigned by the discoverers.
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See also
TrES light curves of the Kepler field are available at the NASA Exoplanet Archive
Similar exoplanet discovery projects
- XO Telescope or XO
- HATNet Project or HAT
- SuperWASP or WASP
- Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope or KELT
- Next-Generation Transit Survey or NGTS
Exoplanet hunting spacecraft
- CoRoT is an ESA spacecraft launched December 2006.
- Kepler Mission is a NASA spacecraft launched March 2009.
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