planetimager.org

Revisión web de planetimager.org

Planet Imager

 Generado el 03 Mayo 2026 03:28 AM

Resultados antiguos? ACTUALIZAR !

La puntuación es 50/100

Contenido SEO

Título

Planet Imager

Longitud : 13

Perfecto, tu título contiene entre 10 y 70 caracteres.

Descripción

Planet ImagerIMAGING & CHARACTERIZING EXOPLANETS

Longitud : 48

Preferiblemente tu descripción meta debe contener entre 70 y 160 caracteres (espacios incluidos). Usa esta herramienta gratuita para calcular la longitu del texto.

Palabras Claves (Keywords)

Muy mal. No hemos encontrado palabras clave (meta keywords) en tu página. Usa este generador de meta tags gratuito para crear tus palabras clave.

Propiedades Meta Og

Esta página no usa etiquetas Og. Estas etiquetas permiten a los rastreadores sociales estructurar mejor tu página. Usa este generador de etiquetas og gratuito para crearlas.

Titulos

H1 H2 H3 H4 H5 H6
0 1 1 1 0 0
  • [H2] Gemini Planet Imager 2.0
  • [H3]
  • [H4] THE GEMINI PLANET IMAGER The Gemini Planet Imager (GPI) 1.0 was a next generation adaptive optics instrument built for the Gemini Telescope with the goal of directly imaging extrasolar planets orbiting nearby stars. In 2011, the GPI Exoplanet Survey (GPIES) team was selected to carry out an 890-hour survey campaign to characterize exoplanets. By the time that the survey was completed in 2019, 531 nearby stars had been observed. Among many others, the science results from this survey include 7 newly resolved debris disks, the discovery of 51 Eridani b, and the discovery of brown dwarf HR 2562 B. The first iteration of GPI, affectionately dubbed “GPI 1.0”, has been decommissioned for upgrades. The final result will be an even better instrument, GPI 2.0, that will allow the GPIES team to make even more discoveries. GPI 2.0 is currently under construction at Notre Dame, and will soon be shipped to Gemini North. WHO GPI has been built by a consortium of U.S. and Canadian institutions, funded by the Gemini Observatory, which is an international partnership comprising the U.S.A., U.K., Canada, Australia, Argentina, Brazil & Chile. The GPIES campaign is partially funded by NSF, NASA, the University of California and the Laboratory Directed Research and Development funding at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. WHERE Initial deployment of GPI was at Gemini South, a telescope with an 8-meter diameter mirror located on Cerro Pachon (Chilean Andes) at an altitude of 2,715 meters (9,000 feet). After more than 5 years of development and one year of integration at UCSC LAO in 2013, the instrument was shipped to Chile in August 2013. The first light of the instrument was conducted in November 2013 and Science Operations started in 2014. From November 2014 to January 2019, our team led the GPI Exoplanet Survey to image and characterize young, Jupiter-like exoplanets. In the spring of 2022, GPI was transferred from Gemini South to its temporary home at the University of Notre Dame. At Notre Dame, GPI is undergoing a series of upgrades which will transform it into GPI 2.0. After the upgrades have taken place, GPI 2.0 will be housed at Gemini North (Gemini South’s twin), which is located on Mauna Kea, Hawaii. With the upgrades that give way to GPI 2.0, new and exciting exoplanets are bound to be unveiled by our survey. WHY GPI directly detects the light from an extrasolar planet to determine its mass and composition, with an ultimate goal of determining the nature of our own planetary system. Over 5,000 extrasolar planets have been confirmed to date (May 2022), but most of these detections come from transit events (79%), where the exoplanet passes in front of its host star as seen from Earth. The transit method can measure the planet’s size and orbit, and detections that come from the direct Doppler (18%) technique can measure the planet’s mass and orbit. But with GPI, we can directly pick out a planet from the star’s glare, and then use spectroscopy to measure the planet’s size, temperature, gravity, and even the composition of its atmosphere. GPIES uses the GPI instrument to target many stars in hopes of understanding how common – or uncommon – our own planetary system may be. HOW The GPI consortium built an advanced adaptive optics system using silicon microchip deformable mirrors to remove atmospheric turbulence, and coronagraphic masks to block the diffracted light from the parent star, allowing exoplanets to be observed directly. GPI provides diffraction limited images between 0.9 and 2.4 microns. Bright natural guide stars (I<9.5 mag) are required for optimal performance of the GPI adaptive optics system. The system will be able to see objects ten million times fainter than their parent star at separations of 0.2-1 arcsecond in a 1-2 hour exposure. That means that the science instrument is able to provide spectroscopy of any object observed and detect warm planets (up to one billion years in age) through their infrared light. We can also measure the polarization of light to see faint disks of dust from other solar systems’ comet and asteroid belts. With the upgrades to be implemented for GPI 2.0, which include new coronagraphic masks and an enhanced high-sensitivity waveform sensor among other improvements, GPI will be able to detect lower mass planets within closer orbital radii. SO WHAT GPI produced the first comprehensive survey of giant exoplanets in the region where giant planets exist in our solar system – within 5 to 40 astronomical units from the Sun. Dozens of these exoplanets have been bright enough for high signal-to-noise ratio spectroscopy, moving our studies of extrasolar planets into the realm of detailed astrophysics. Below you can see all GPI observations taken for the GPI Exoplanet Survey squished into a 30 second montage. ABOUT NEWS SCIENCE TECH SOFTWARE GPI DATA PIPELINE DOWNLOAD DATA PIPELINE DOCUMENTATION INSTRUMENT CONTROL GPIES BLOG {"prefetch":[{"source":"document","where":{"and":[{"href_matches":"/*"},{"not":{"href_matches":["/wp-*.php","/wp-admin/*","/wp-content/uploads/*","/wp-content/*","/wp-content/plugins/*","/wp-content/themes/wpcloud/*","/*\\?(.+)"]}},{"not":{"selector_matches":"a[rel~=\"nofollow\"]"}},{"not":{"selector_matches":".no-prefetch, .no-prefetch a"}}]},"eagerness":"conservative"}]} ABOUT NEWS SCIENCE TECH SOFTWARE GPI DATA PIPELINE DOWNLOAD DATA PIPELINE DOCUMENTATION INSTRUMENT CONTROL GPIES BLOG Follow Us

Imagenes

Hemos encontrado 3 imágenes en esta web.

Bien, la mayoría de tus imágenes tienen atributo alt.

Ratio Texto/HTML

Ratio : 2%

El ratio entre texto y código HTML de esta página es menor que el 15 por ciento, esto significa que tu web posiblemente necesite más contenido en texto.

Flash

Perfecto, no se ha detectado contenido Flash en la página.

Iframe

Muy mal, tienes Iframes en la página, esto significa que el contenido no podrá ser indexado.

Reescritura URL

Bien. Tus enlaces parecen amigables

Guiones bajos en las URLs

Perfecto! No hemos detectado guiones bajos en tus URLs

Enlaces en página

Hemos encontrado un total de 15 enlaces incluyendo 0 enlace(s) a ficheros

Ancla Tipo Jugo
ABOUT Interna Pasando Jugo
NEWS Interna Pasando Jugo
SCIENCE Interna Pasando Jugo
TECH Interna Pasando Jugo
SOFTWARE Interna Pasando Jugo
GPI DATA PIPELINE DOWNLOAD Interna Pasando Jugo
DATA PIPELINE DOCUMENTATION Interna Pasando Jugo
INSTRUMENT CONTROL Interna Pasando Jugo
GPIES Interna Pasando Jugo
BLOG Interna Pasando Jugo
Skip to Content Interna Pasando Jugo
Gemini South Externo Pasando Jugo
LAO Externo Pasando Jugo
shipped Externo Pasando Jugo
 extrasolar planets Externo Pasando Jugo

Palabras Clave SEO

Nube de Palabras Clave

content data tech download gpi science news pipeline skip software

Consistencia de las Palabras Clave

Palabra Clave (Keyword) Contenido Título Palabras Claves (Keywords) Descripción Titulos
pipeline 2
data 2
skip 1
content 1
news 1

Usabilidad

Url

Dominio : planetimager.org

Longitud : 16

Favicon

Genial, tu web tiene un favicon.

Imprimibilidad

No hemos encontrado una hoja de estilos CSS para impresión.

Idioma

Genial. Has declarado el idioma en.

Dublin Core

Esta página no usa Dublin Core.

Documento

Tipo de documento (Doctype)

HTML 5

Codificación

Perfecto. Has declarado como codificación UTF-8.

Validez W3C

Errores : 0

Avisos : 0

Privacidad de los Emails

Genial. No hay ninguna dirección de email como texto plano!

HTML obsoleto

Genial, no hemos detectado ninguna etiqueta HTML obsoleta.

Consejos de Velocidad

Excelente, esta web no usa tablas.
Muy mal, tu web está usando estilos embenidos (inline CSS).
Muy mal, tu página web usa demasiados ficheros CSS (más de 4).
Muy mal, tu sitio usa demasiados ficheros JavaScript (más de 6).
Su sitio web se beneficia del tipo de compresión gzip. ¡Perfecto!

Movil

Optimización Móvil

Icono para Apple
Etiqueta Meta Viewport
Contenido Flash

Optimización

Mapa del sitio XML

¡Perfecto! Su sitio tiene un mapa del sitio en XML.

https://planetimager.org/wp-sitemap.xml

Robots.txt

https://planetimager.org/robots.txt

¡Estupendo! Su sitio web tiene un archivo robots.txt.

Herramientas de Analítica

No disponible

No hemos encontrado ninguna herramienta de analítica en esta web.

La analítica Web le permite medir la actividad de los visitantes de su sitio web. Debería tener instalada al menos una herramienta de analítica y se recomienda instalar otra más para obtener una confirmación de los resultados.

PageSpeed Insights


Dispositivo
Categorias

Free SEO Testing Tool

Free SEO Testing Tool es una herramienta seo gratuita que te ayuda a analizar tu web