EO11/AB2

Super-Earths and Life (co-organized)
Co-Convener: Segura 
Oral Program
 / Thu, 06 Oct, 15:30–17:00  / Room Vénus Room
Poster Program
 / Attendance Thu, 06 Oct, 17:30–19:00  / Poster Area

After a decade rich in giant exoplanet detections, observation techniques have reached the threshold to find and characterize planets of less than 10 Earth masses - so called Super-Earths - potentially rocky and habitable worlds.

The detection of the first Super-Earths in April 2007 led to fundamental questions: from the influence of plate tectonics and different geochemical cycles on habitable conditions to the detectability of different biota from a remote spectrum. This number will raise significantly when Kepler planetary candidates will be confirmed. What does it take for super-Earths to support life?

Ground as well as space based telescopes to characterization rocky exoplanets, are already in development phase (E-ELT, TNT, GMT, James Webb Space Telescope). With no similar planet in our solar system, we will discuss what it take to characterize these new worlds. This session will connect theory of rocky planets and observation strategy to search for the atmospheric signatures of small exoplanets in general and for biospheres in particular.