Three Earth-sized planets discovered in a compact binary system
Three Earth-sized planets discovered in the TOI-2267 binary system by ULiège researchers and their international partners offer new insights into planetary formation.
Three Earth-sized planets discovered in the TOI-2267 binary system by ULiège researchers and their international partners offer new insights into planetary formation.
Two recent international studies confirm the significance of the exoplanetary system discovered nearly ten years ago by astronomers at ULiège.
The discovery of TOI-6894b, involving astronomers from ULiège, challenges models of giant planet formation.
Astronomers report the detection of 138 decameter rocky bodies in the main asteroid belt, the smallest ever detected with implications for the asteroid population and the planetary defense.
The SPECULOOS project, led by the University of Liège, has revealed the existence of an Earth-sized planet around SPECULOOS-3, a nearby star similar in size to Jupiter and twice as cold as our Sun.
Co-discovered by researchers from the University of Liège, this exoplanet is larger but seven times less massive than Jupiter and is the second least dense planet discovered to date.
With the help of the SPECULOOS telescopes in Chile, the Canary Islands and Morocco, researchers have set their sights on an unusual exoplanet the size of Jupiter.
A new episode looking at the ever-growing interest in the search for life elsewhere in the universe. We talk to Didier Queloz, Anne-Sophie Libert and Michaël Gillon.
An interview with Michaël Gillon, the astrophysicist who discovered the system in 2015 and who questions the conclusions of the latest published studies.
The system, named TOI-2096, consists of two planets orbiting a cool star in a synchronized dance at approximately 150 light-years from Earth.
The frequency of volcanic eruptions at the surface of this planet could be as great as on Io, the most volcanic body in our solar system.
This prize is awarded by the L'Oréal Foundation to her for the research she conducted during her PhD on the Trappist-1 system at the Exotic Lab of the ULiège and on the JWST telescope during her post-doctorate at the CEA at Paris-Saclay.