Back to Search Start Over

The Transiting Exoplanet Community Early Release Science Program for JWST

Authors :
Bean, Jacob L.
Stevenson, Kevin B.
Batalha, Natalie M.
Berta-Thompson, Zachory
Kreidberg, Laura
Crouzet, Nicolas
Benneke, Björn
Line, Michael R.
Sing, David K.
Wakeford, Hannah R.
Knutson, Heather A.
Kempton, Eliza M. -R.
Désert, Jean-Michel
Crossfield, Ian
Batalha, Natasha E.
de Wit, Julien
Parmentier, Vivien
Harrington, Joseph
Moses, Julianne I.
Lopez-Morales, Mercedes
Alam, Munazza K.
Blecic, Jasmina
Bruno, Giovanni
Carter, Aarynn L.
Chapman, John W.
Decin, Leen
Dragomir, Diana
Evans, Thomas M.
Fortney, Jonathan J.
Fraine, Jonathan D.
Gao, Peter
Muñoz, Antonio García
Gibson, Neale P.
Goyal, Jayesh M.
Heng, Kevin
Hu, Renyu
Kendrew, Sarah
Kilpatrick, Brian M.
Krick, Jessica
Lagage, Pierre-Olivier
Lendl, Monika
Louden, Tom
Madhusudhan, Nikku
Mandell, Avi M.
Mansfield, Megan
May, Erin M.
Morello, Giuseppe
Morley, Caroline V.
Nikolov, Nikolay
Redfield, Seth
Roberts, Jessica E.
Schlawin, Everett
Spake, Jessica J.
Todorov, Kamen O.
Tsiaras, Angelos
Venot, Olivia
Waalkes, William C.
Wheatley, Peter J.
Zellem, Robert T.
Angerhausen, Daniel
Barrado, David
Carone, Ludmila
Casewell, Sarah L.
Cubillos, Patricio E.
Damiano, Mario
de Val-Borro, Miguel
Drummond, Benjamin
Edwards, Billy
Endl, Michael
Espinoza, Nestor
France, Kevin
Gizis, John E.
Greene, Thomas P.
Henning, Thomas K.
Hong, Yucian
Ingalls, James G.
Iro, Nicolas
Irwin, Patrick G. J.
Kataria, Tiffany
Lahuis, Fred
Leconte, Jérémy
Lillo-Box, Jorge
Lines, Stefan
Lothringer, Joshua D.
Mancini, Luigi
Marchis, Franck
Mayne, Nathan
Palle, Enric
Rauscher, Emily
Roudier, Gaël
Shkolnik, Evgenya L.
Southworth, John
Swain, Mark R.
Taylor, Jake
Teske, Johanna
Tinetti, Giovanna
Tremblin, Pascal
Tucker, Gregory S.
van Boekel, Roy
Waldmann, Ingo P.
Weaver, Ian C.
Zingales, Tiziano
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) presents the opportunity to transform our understanding of planets and the origins of life by revealing the atmospheric compositions, structures, and dynamics of transiting exoplanets in unprecedented detail. However, the high-precision, time-series observations required for such investigations have unique technical challenges, and prior experience with other facilities indicates that there will be a steep learning curve when JWST becomes operational. In this paper we describe the science objectives and detailed plans of the Transiting Exoplanet Community Early Release Science (ERS) Program, which is a recently approved program for JWST observations early in Cycle 1. The goal of this project, for which the obtained data will have no exclusive access period, is to accelerate the acquisition and diffusion of technical expertise for transiting exoplanet observations with JWST, while also providing a compelling set of representative datasets that will enable immediate scientific breakthroughs. The Transiting Exoplanet Community ERS Program will exercise the time-series modes of all four JWST instruments that have been identified as the consensus highest priorities, observe the full suite of transiting planet characterization geometries (transits, eclipses, and phase curves), and target planets with host stars that span an illustrative range of brightnesses. The observations in this program were defined through an inclusive and transparent process that had participation from JWST instrument experts and international leaders in transiting exoplanet studies. Community engagement in the project will be centered on a two-phase Data Challenge that culminates with the delivery of planetary spectra, time-series instrument performance reports, and open-source data analysis toolkits in time to inform the agenda for Cycle 2 of the JWST mission.<br />Comment: PASP in press

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1803.04985
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/1538-3873/aadbf3