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Espectroscopía de Transmisión de Exoplanetas×Transferencia Radiativa×Fotometría de Tránsito×
CampoAstronomíaAstronomíaAstronomía
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen200219781984
Autor originalDavid CharbonneauDimitri MihalasWilliam Borucki
TipoSpectroscopic observational methodComputational simulation methodObservational photometric pipeline
Fuente seminalCharbonneau, D., Brown, T. M., Noyes, R. W., & Gilliland, R. L. (2002). Detection of an atmospheric trace constituent in the transmission spectrum of a distant extrasolar planet. Astrophysical Journal, 568(1), 377-384. DOI ↗Mihalas, D. (1978). Stellar Atmospheres (2nd ed.). San Francisco: W.H. Freeman. ISBN: 0716703742Borucki, W. J., & Summers, A. L. (1984). The photometric method of detecting other planetary systems. Astrophysical Journal, 281, 537-553. DOI ↗
AliasTransmission Spectrum, Atmospheric Spectroscopy, Transit SpectroscopyRT Modeling, Radiative Transport, Light Transport SimulationPhotometric Transit Method, Planetary Transit Detection
Relacionados333
ResumenTransmission spectroscopy is a technique for studying the atmospheres of exoplanets by analyzing the light passing through the planetary atmosphere during transit. Pioneered by David Charbonneau in 2002 with the detection of sodium in HD 209458b's atmosphere, this method has become the primary tool for characterizing exoplanet atmospheres and searching for biosignatures.Radiative transfer is the mathematical treatment of how light propagates through matter, including absorption, emission, and scattering. Central to astrophysics and stellar atmosphere modeling, radiative transfer calculations translate physical conditions (density, temperature, composition) into observable spectra and colors, bridging theory and observation.Transit photometry is an observational technique that detects exoplanets by monitoring the periodic dips in stellar brightness as planets cross in front of their host stars. First systematized by William Borucki in 1984, this method became the most successful exoplanet detection technique, with the Kepler space telescope discovering thousands of confirmed exoplanets using this approach.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Exoplanet Transmission Spectroscopy · Radiative Transfer · Transit Photometry. Recuperado el 2026-06-20 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare