Skip to content
HKU Home
About Astrobiology
What is Astrobiology
HKU Learning Materials
Online Courses and Links
About this site
FAQ
News
News
Hong Kong Astrobiology on Twitter
Hong Kong Astrobiology on Facebook
Archive
Origin & Evolution of Life on Earth
Life in Extreme Environments
Habitability & Life in the Solar System
Exoplanet Exploration
People
HKU Astrobiology Group
HKU Astrobiological Research
Hong Kong Astrobiology Community (HKAC)
Ask an Astrobiologist
Contact Us
Exoplanet Exploration
Home
Archive
Exoplanet Exploration
Sort By
All Post
10/2014
06/2014
04/2012
Signals of Water on Extrasolar Planets
Using the powerful eye of NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, tw...
19/10/2014
Odd Tilts Could Make More Worlds Habitable
Pivoting planets that lean one way and then change orientation within ...
19/10/2014
Atmospheric Pressure on Exoplanets
NAI-funded astrobiologists at the University of Washington h...
19/10/2014
An Excess of Enantiomers in Primitive Meteorites
Astrobiologists at the University of Arizona and Arizona State Univers...
19/10/2014
Every Red Dwarf Star Has at Least One Planet
Three new planets classified as habitable-zone super-Earths are amongs...
19/10/2014
Introducing Earth’s Bigger, Older Brother: Planet Kapteyn b
We now know of a potentially habitable planet five times the size of E...
19/10/2014
Rotation of Planets Influences Habitability
There are currently almost 2,000 extrasolar planets known to us, but m...
19/10/2014
‘Hot Jupiters’ provoke their own host suns to wobble
Blame the “hot Jupiters.” These large, gaseous exoplanets...
19/10/2014
NASA Telescopes Uncover Early Construction of Giant Galaxy
Astronomers have for the first time caught a glimpse of the earliest s...
14/10/2014
Half of all Exoplanet Host Stars are Binaries
Imagine living on an exoplanet with two suns. One, you orbit and ...
14/10/2014
Previous page
1
2
3
Next page
Highlights
Does the Earth have a deep biosphere?
Introducing Earth’s Bigger, Older Brother: Planet Kapteyn b
Cassini Tracks Clouds Developing Over a Titan Sea
Antifreeze proteins in Antarctic fish prevent both freezing and melting
Life’s Engine: The Early Ocean
Go to top
Go to top