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The Future of Exoplanet Direct Detection

Authors :
John Monnier
Gioia Rau
Ellyn K Baines
Joel Sanchez‐Bermudez
Martin Elvis
Sam Ragland
Rachel L Akeson
Gerard van Belle
Ryan Norris
Kathryn Gordon
Denis Defrère
Stephen Ridgway
Jean‐Baptiste Le Bouquin
Narsireddy Anugu
Nicholas Scott
Stephen Kane
Noel Richardson
Zsolt Regal
Zhaohuan Zhu
Andrea Chiavassa
Gautam Vasisht
Keivan G Stassun
Chuanfei Dong
Olivier Absi
Sylvestre Lacour
Gerd Weigelt
Douglas Gies
Fred C Adams
Nuria Calvet
Sascha P. Quanz
Catherine Espaillat
Tyler Gardner
Alexandra Greenbaum
Rafael Millan‐Gabet
Chris Packham
Mario Gai
Quentin Kral
Jean‐Philippe Berger
Hendrik Linz
Lucia Klarmann
Jaehan Bae
Rebeca Garcia Lopez
Gallenne Alexandre
Fabien Baron
Lee Hartmann
Makoto Kishimoto
Melissa McClure
Johan Olofsson
Chris Haniff
Michael Line
Romain G. Petrov
Michael Smith
Christian Hummel
Theo ten Brummelaar
Matthew De Furio
Stephen Rinehart
David Leisawitz
William Danchi
Daniel Huber
Edward Wishnow
Denis Mourard
Benjamin Pope
Michael Ireland
Stefan Kraus
Benjamin Setterholm
Russel White
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2019.

Abstract

Diffraction fundamentally limits our ability to image and characterize exoplanets. Currant and planned coronagraphic searches for exoplanets are making incredible strides but are fundamentally limited by the inner working angle of a few λ/D. Some crucial topics, such as demographics of exoplanets within the first 50 Myr and the infrared characterization of terrestrial planets, are beyond the reach of the single aperture angular resolution for the foreseeable future. Interferometry offers some advantages in exoplanet detection and characterization and we explore in this white paper some of the potential scientific breakthroughs possible. We demonstrate here that investments in "exoplanet interferometry" could open up new possibilities for speckle suppression through spatial coherence, a giant boost in astrometric precision for determining exoplanet orbits, ability to take a census of young giant exoplanets (clusters <50 Myr age), and an unrivaled potential for infrared nulling from space to detect terrestrial planets and search for atmospheric biomarkers. All signs point to an exciting future for exoplanets and interferometers, albeit a promise that will take decades to fulfill.

Subjects

Subjects :
Instrumentation And Photography

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Notes :
80GSFC17M0002
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20205000772
Document Type :
Report