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Large Interferometer For Exoplanets (LIFE). X. Detectability of currently known exoplanets and synergies with future IR/O/UV reflected-starlight imaging missions

Authors :
Carrión-González, Óscar
Kammerer, Jens
Angerhausen, Daniel
Dannert, Felix
Muñoz, Antonio García
Quanz, Sascha P.
Absil, Olivier
Beichman, Charles A.
Girard, Julien H.
Mennesson, Bertrand
Meyer, Michael R.
Stapelfeldt, Karl R.
Collaboration, The LIFE
Source :
A&A 678, A96 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The next generation of space-based observatories will characterize the atmospheres of low-mass, temperate exoplanets with the direct-imaging technique. This will be a major step forward in our understanding of exoplanet diversity and the prevalence of potentially habitable conditions beyond the Earth. We compute a list of currently known exoplanets detectable with the mid-infrared Large Interferometer For Exoplanets (LIFE) in thermal emission. We also compute the list of known exoplanets accessible to a notional design of the Habitable Worlds Observatory (HWO), observing in reflected starlight. With a pre-existing method, we processed the NASA Exoplanet Archive and computed orbital realizations for each known exoplanet. We derived their mass, radius, equilibrium temperature, and planet-star angular separation. We used the LIFEsim simulator to compute the integration time ($t_{int}$) required to detect each planet with LIFE. A planet is considered detectable if a broadband signal-to-noise ratio $S/N$=7 is achieved over the spectral range $4-18.5\mu$m in $t_{int}\leq$100 hours. We tested whether the planet is accessible to HWO in reflected starlight based on its notional inner and outer working angles, and minimum planet-to-star contrast. LIFE's reference configuration (four 2-m telescopes with 5% throughput and a nulling baseline between 10-100 m) can detect 212 known planets within 20 pc. Of these, 55 are also accessible to HWO in reflected starlight, offering a unique opportunity for synergies in atmospheric characterization. LIFE can also detect 32 known transiting exoplanets. Furthermore, 38 LIFE-detectable planets orbit in the habitable zone, of which 13 with $M_p<5M_\oplus$ and 8 with $5M_\oplus<M_p<10M_\oplus$. LIFE already has enough targets to perform ground-breaking analyses of low-mass, habitable-zone exoplanets, a fraction of which will also be accessible to other instruments.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 14 pages, 5 Tables, 5 Figures + Appendix

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
A&A 678, A96 (2023)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2308.09646
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202347027