Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium

Speaker Heike Rauer
Title CoRoT
Abstract The CoRoT satellite was launched on December 2006 with two goals: to search for extrasolar planets and study the interior structure of stars. So far, six planets and a brown dwarf (with 20 Jupiter masses) have been reported and several results on stellar seismology are published. Among the highlights of planet discoveries from CoRoT is a small terrestrial planet, CoRoT-7b, with less than two Earth radii size. The present status of the CoRoT mission, with emphasis on the steadily growing CoRoT planet family, will be reported. In addition, potential observational biases of the two currently most successful planet detection methods, radial velocity and transit search, will be addressed. Finally, an outlook to proposed future transit detection missions (PLATO) and prospects for characterization of transiting terrestrial planets will be given.