Alternative names | APF |
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Part of | Lick Observatory |
Location(s) | Santa Clara County, California, Pacific States Region |
Coordinates | 37°20′33″N 121°38′18″W / 37.34254148°N 121.63826312°W |
Altitude | 1,280 m (4,200 ft) |
Telescope style | optical telescope robotic telescope |
Diameter | 2.4 m (7 ft 10 in) |
Website | apf |
Related media on Commons | |
The Automated Planet Finder (APF) Telescope a.k.a. Rocky Planet Finder,[1] 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.[2] 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 about 10 stars per night. Over the span of a decade, the telescope is expected to study 1,000 nearby stars for planets.[3] Its estimated cost was $10 million.[4] The total cost-to-completion of the APF project was $12.37 million.[2] First light was originally scheduled for 2006, but delays in the construction of the major components of the telescope[5] pushed this back to August 2013.[1] It was commissioned in August 2013.[6]
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.[1]
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),[1] similar to the radial velocity precision of HARPS and HIRES.