| Astronomer/Professor of Astronomy & Astrophysics UCO/Lick ObservatoryUniversity of California, Santa Cruz, CA 95064
Office: ISB 343Email: vogt@ucolick.org
 Educational Background:A.B., Physics, U.C. Berkeley, 1972
 A.B., Astronomy, U.C. Berkeley, 1972
 M.S., Astronomy, U. of Texas at Austin, 1976
 Ph.D., Astronomy, U. of Texas at Austin, 1978
 Research Interests:Astronomical instrumentation, optical design, high-dispersion spectroscopy, exoplanet hunting
    Visit Steve's Image Gallery  APF Image credit: John Russo / San Francisco Chronicle /Polaris | 
 
   6/25/13: GJ667C: Habitable Zone Packed with Three  Earth-sized Exoplanets  Press Release Paper: A Dynamically Packed Planetary System around GJ667C with 3 super-Earths in its Habitable Zone
 Movie: GJ 667C's Orbiting Planets
 Movie: Overview of GJ 667C's Planets (wmv download)
 Figures: Artistic Renderings
 Figure: Habitable Zone Diagrams
 Catalog: Planet Habitability Laboratory
 Figure: Constellation View
 Reanalysis of data from Keck and other observatories combined with data from ESO's HARPS (High Accuracy Radial velocity Planet Searcher) has led to the discovery of the first extrasolar planetary system with three potentially habitable planets. GJ 667C, a nearby low-mass star, is the first star to known host several Super-earth planets in its habitable zone. In this planetary system, the habitable zone lies entirely within an orbit the size of Mercury's, much closer in than for our Sun.  "The findings are based in part on data that Paul Butler and I have taken over the past 13 years using the HIRES spectrometer on the Keck Telescope in Hawaii," said Steve Vogt, UCSC professor. This discovery indicates that habitable planets may be more numerous that previously thought. The number of potentially habitable planets in our galaxy is much greater if we can expect to find several planets around each low-mass star.  
        2/2/12: GJ667C: Second Potentially Habitable Earth-sized Exoplanet Discovered   Press Release GJ 667C Paper
 Movie: Orbital Comparison with Sun
 Figure: Constellation View
 Figure: Artist's Rendering
 Figure: Phased Orbits
 Figure: Periodograms
 Figure: Top View
 A planet-hunting team led by astronomers at UCSC and the Carnegie Institution of Washington has discovered a second earth-size planet orbiting a nearby star in the habitable zone where liquid water could exist. Findings are reported in a paper at arXiv.org. "This was expected to be a rather unlikely star to host planets. Yet there they are, around a very nearby, metal-poor example of the most common type of star in our galaxy," said Vogt. "The detection of this planet, this nearby and this soon, implies that our galaxy must be teeming with billions of potentially habitable rocky planets." [More] APF: Automated Planet Finder Telescope 
    The 2.4-meter APF, currently nearing completion atop Mt. Hamilton, is the first telescope capable of detecting rocky planets that may support life. Every night it will search robotically for these planets. [More] Steve is the APF P.I. and leads the team that designed and is building the Levy spectrograph, optimized for speed and radial velocity precision. Spectrograph will detect changes in a star’s velocity as small as 1 meter per second--human walking speed.APF HomepageAPFCamDOME: Construction of APF, time-lapse movie ImagesAPF Press Release, 8/21/10Exoplanets: Planets Beyond our Solar System 
    The ultimate goal of extrasolar planet search is to discover a solar system similar to our own with earth-like planets capable of supporting life. Steve's roles in Exoplanet project: 
	  Built Hamilton spectrometer,with which many of the first planets were foundRe-optimized the Hamilton optics in 1994 to increase the Exoplanet's rv precision from 10 m/s to 3 m/s
	  Built HIRES for Keck and incorporated Iodine cell for exoplanet workPrincipal member of the California-Carnegie Exoplanet Team from 1995-2007P.I. of the Automated Planet Finder facility 2001-present Co-leader (with Paul Butler) of the Lick-Carnegie Exoplanet Team 2007-present  Exoplanet Press Release, 9/29/10Artist's images of Extrasolar Planets: Lynette Cook's illustrationsEarthbound homepage
  TMT: Thirty Meter Telescope  
    TMT will be an extremely large telescope, with a 30-meter mirror comprised of 492 hexagonal-shaped segments. The spectrometer will analyze light in visible and infrared wavelengths to help astronomers answer such profound questions as "How do planets form?" and "What is the ultimate fate of our galaxy?"Steve completed and tendered to the TMT project a detailed design study for a Moderate-To-High-Resolution Spectrometer (MTHR) which will enable TMT to deliver the full advantage of its large aperture at first-light for high-resolution optical spectroscopy. [Read more] Project Manager's Reports: Status of TMT Spectrograph CAD renderingTMT homepage  
  HIRES: High Resolution Echelle Spectrograph 
  Hamilton Echelle Spectrograph 
    The Hamilton Spectrograph, designed by Steve Vogt and installed at the coudé focus of Lick Observatory's Shane telescope in 1987, is still frequently used to observe distant objects.Steve  roles in Hamilton Spectrograph Project:
	  P.I. of projectOriginated the conceptDesigned the optics  with Harland EppsOversaw all detailed mechanical, electronic, and optical design and fabricationInstalled and commissioned spectrograph Read Steve's paper on the Hamilton Spectrograph and the philosophy behind its design Public information about the Hamilton Spectrograph  |