Nationality American Role Astronomer Discovered HD 156668 b | Name John Johnson | |
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Citizenship United States of America Institutions California Institute of TechnologyHarvard University Alma mater Missouri University of Science and TechnologyUniversity of California at Berkeley Education University of California, Berkeley Residence Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States Notable awards Sloan Fellowship, Newton Lacy Pierce Prize in Astronomy Similar People Geoffrey Marcy, Debra Fischer, R Paul Butler |
Dr john johnson kepler mission update 15th annual international mars society convention
John Asher Johnson is an American astrophysicist and professor of astronomy at Harvard. He was a formerly a professor at the California Institute of Technology and a researcher with NASA's Exoplanet Science Research Institute.
Contents
- Dr john johnson kepler mission update 15th annual international mars society convention
- Confirming and characterizing kepler s curious planets john johnson 3 7 13
- References

In 2012 Johnson's team discovered three exoplanets, including the smallest one found to date, orbiting a red dwarf using the Kepler orbital telescope. A subsequent study used the host star's similarity to Barnard's star and observations from the Keck Observatory to determine more information about the system and the size of its three planets. He is the principal investigator of the Miniature Exoplanet Radial Velocity Array (MINERVA), a ground-based robotic search for exoplanets.

Confirming and characterizing kepler s curious planets john johnson 3 7 13
References
John Johnson (astronomer) Wikipedia(Text) CC BY-SA