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- Automated_Planet_Finder abstract "The Automated Planet Finder Telescope (APF) is a fully robotic 2.4-meter optical telescope at Lick Observatory, situated on the summit of Mount Hamilton, east of San Jose, California, USA. It is designed to search for extrasolar planets in the range of five to twenty times the mass of the Earth. The instrument will examine ~10 stars per night. Over a decade, the telescope will study 1,000 nearby stars for planets. It has an estimated cost of $10 million. The total cost-to-completion of the APF project was $12.37 million.The telescope uses high-precision radial velocity measurements to measure the gravitational reflex motion of nearby stars caused by the orbiting of planets. The design goal is to detect stellar motions as small as one meter per second, comparable to a slow walking speed. The main targets will be stars within about 100 light years of the Earth.First light was originally scheduled for 2006, but delays in the construction of themajor components of the telescope pushed this back to mid-2009. As of July 2013, the telescope is nearing the end of commissioning, and regular operations are anticipated in fall 2013, advancing to fully robotic operations by the end of 2013. It was effectively the case on January 1, 2014.Early tests show that the performance of the Ken and Gloria Levy Doppler Spectrometer is meeting the design goals. The spectrometer has high throughput and is meeting the design sensitivity of (1.0 m/s), similar to the radial velocity precision of HARPS and HIRES.".
- Automated_Planet_Finder thumbnail Automated_Planet_Finder_Dome.JPG?width=300.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageExternalLink apfcam.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageExternalLink apf.html.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageExternalLink astrograph.html.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageID "6143326".
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageLength "3983".
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageOutDegree "14".
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageRevisionID "673349800".
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageWikiLink Breakthrough_Listen.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageWikiLink Category:Exoplanet_search_projects.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageWikiLink Category:Lick_Observatory.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageWikiLink Category:Telescopes.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageWikiLink Earth.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageWikiLink Exoplanet.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageWikiLink Extrasolar_planets.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageWikiLink HARPS.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageWikiLink High_Accuracy_Radial_Velocity_Planet_Searcher.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageWikiLink Ken_and_Gloria_Levy_Doppler_Spectrometer.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageWikiLink Lick_Observatory.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageWikiLink Mount_Hamilton_(California).
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageWikiLink Radial_velocity.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageWikiLink Spectrograph.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageWikiLink W._M._Keck_Observatory.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageWikiLink File:Automated_Planet_Finder_Dome.JPG.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageWikiLinkText "Automated Planet Finder".
- Automated_Planet_Finder hasPhotoCollection Automated_Planet_Finder.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Coord.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Exoplanet_search_projects.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Observatory-stub.
- Automated_Planet_Finder wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Automated_Planet_Finder subject Category:Exoplanet_search_projects.
- Automated_Planet_Finder subject Category:Lick_Observatory.
- Automated_Planet_Finder subject Category:Telescopes.
- Automated_Planet_Finder point "37.3425407 -121.6381903".
- Automated_Planet_Finder type SpatialThing.
- Automated_Planet_Finder comment "The Automated Planet Finder Telescope (APF) is a fully robotic 2.4-meter optical telescope at Lick Observatory, situated on the summit of Mount Hamilton, east of San Jose, California, USA. It is designed to search for extrasolar planets in the range of five to twenty times the mass of the Earth. The instrument will examine ~10 stars per night. Over a decade, the telescope will study 1,000 nearby stars for planets. It has an estimated cost of $10 million.".
- Automated_Planet_Finder label "Automated Planet Finder".
- Automated_Planet_Finder sameAs Buscador_de_Planetas_Automatizado.
- Automated_Planet_Finder sameAs Automated_Planet_Finder.
- Automated_Planet_Finder sameAs Automated_Planet_Finder.
- Automated_Planet_Finder sameAs Automated_Planet_Finder.
- Automated_Planet_Finder sameAs m.0fsdmv.
- Automated_Planet_Finder sameAs Q1748180.
- Automated_Planet_Finder sameAs Q1748180.
- Automated_Planet_Finder lat "37.3425407".
- Automated_Planet_Finder long "-121.6381903".
- Automated_Planet_Finder wasDerivedFrom Automated_Planet_Finder?oldid=673349800.
- Automated_Planet_Finder depiction Automated_Planet_Finder_Dome.JPG.
- Automated_Planet_Finder isPrimaryTopicOf Automated_Planet_Finder.