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Michiel Min

Researcher at Netherlands Institute for Space Research

Publications -  273
Citations -  12834

Michiel Min is an academic researcher from Netherlands Institute for Space Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stars & Radiative transfer. The author has an hindex of 60, co-authored 265 publications receiving 11541 citations. Previous affiliations of Michiel Min include Utrecht University & Leiden University.

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The building blocks of planets within the ‘terrestrial’ region of protoplanetary disks

TL;DR: Sp spatially resolved detections and compositional analyses of dust building blocks in the innermost two astronomical units of three proto-planetary disks imply that silicates crystallize before any terrestrial planets are formed, consistent with the composition of meteorites in the Solar System.
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A 10 μm spectroscopic survey of Herbig Ae star disks: Grain growth and crystallization

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present spectroscopic observations of a large sample of Herbig Ae stars in the 10 µm spectral region and perform compositional fits of the spectra based on properties of homogeneous as well as inhomogeneous spherical particles.
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A 10 micron spectroscopic survey of Herbig Ae star disks: grain growth and crystallization

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present spectroscopic observations of a large sample of Herbig Ae stars in the 10 micrometer spectral region, and perform compositional fits of the spectra based on properties of homogeneous as well as inhomogeneous spherical particles.
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A chemical survey of exoplanets with ARIEL

Giovanna Tinetti, +243 more
TL;DR: The ARIEL mission as mentioned in this paper was designed to observe a large number of transiting planets for statistical understanding, including gas giants, Neptunes, super-Earths and Earth-size planets around a range of host star types using transit spectroscopy in the 1.25-7.8 μm spectral range and multiple narrow-band photometry in the optical.
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Benchmark problems for continuum radiative transfer - High optical depths, anisotropic scattering, and polarisation

TL;DR: In this article, the accuracy of seven independently developed radiative transfer codes by comparing the temperature structures, spectral energy distributions, scattered light images, and linear polarisation maps that each model predicts for a variety of disc opacities and viewing angles is evaluated.