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Research highlights: uppercase per direct link and w. style (Solar System)
 
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{{Short description|Network of robotic telescopes}}
{{More citations needed|date=July 2022}}
'''RoboNet'''-1.0 was a prototype global network of UK-built 2-metre [[robotic telescopestelescope]]s, the largest of their kind in the world, comprising the [[Liverpool Telescope]] on La Palma (Canary Islands), the [[Faulkes Telescope North]] on Maui (Hawaii), and the [[Faulkes Telescope South]] in Australia, managed by a consortium of ten UK universities under the lead of [[Liverpool John Moores University]]. For the technological aims of integrating a global network to act effectively as a single instrument, and maximizing the scientific return by applying the newest developments in [[e-Science]], RoboNet adopted the intelligent-agent architecture devised and maintained by the [[eSTAR project]].
 
With the flexible scheduling and short response time of robotic telescopes being ideal for [[time-___domain astronomy]], RoboNet-1.0 had two major science goals that critically depend on these requirements: the determination of origin and nature of [[gamma-ray bursts]], and the detection of cool [[extra-solar planets]] by means of [[gravitational microlensing]].
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* [[OGLE-2005-BLG-390Lb]] (the most Earth-like planet at the time of its discovery)
* [[OGLE-2005-BLG-169L]]b
* [[OGLE-2006-BLG-109L]]b and OGLE-2006-BLG-109Lc (a pair similar to Jupiter and Saturn in the [[Solar systemSystem]])
* OGLE-2007-BLG-368Lb a cold Neptune-Mass planet{{Citation needed|date=March 2022}}
* [[MOA-2009-BLG-319L]]b a massive planet orbiting an M dwarf