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Planet Formation Imager (PFI): Science Vision and Key Requirements

Authors :
Stefan Kraus
John D Monnier
Michael J Ireland
Gaspard Duchene
Catherine Espaillat
Sebastian Hoenig
Attila Juhasz
Chris Mordasini
Johan Olofsson
Claudia Paladini
Keivan Stassun
Neal Turner
Gautam Vasisht
Tim J Harries
Matthew R Bate
Jean-Francois Gonzalez
Alexis Matter
Zhaohuan Zhu
Olja Panic
Zsolt Regaly
Alessandro Morbidelli
Farzana Meru
Sebastian Wolf
John Ilee
Jean-Philippe Berger
Ming Zhao
Quentin Kral
Andreas Morlok
Amy Bonsor
David Ciardi
Stephen R Kane
Kaitlin Kratter
Greg Laughlin
Joshua Pepper
Sean N Raymond
Lucas Labadie
Richard P Nelson
Gerd Weigelt
Theo ten Brummelaar
Arnaud Pierens
Rene Oudmaijer
Wilhelm Kley
Benjamin Pope
Eric L N Jensen
Amelia Bayo
Michael Smith
Tabetha Boyajian
Luis Henry Quiroga-Nuñez
Rafael Millan-Gabet
Andrea Chiavassa
Alexandre Gallenne
Mark Reynolds
Willem-Jan de Wit
Markus Wittkowski
Florentin Millour
Poshak Gandhi
Cristina Ramos Almeida
Almudena Alonso Herrero
Chris Packham
Makoto Kishimoto
Konrad R W Tristram
Jorg-Uwe Pott
Jean Surdej
David Buscher
Chris Haniff
Sylvestre Lacour
Romain Petrov
Steve Ridgway
Peter Tuthill
Gerard van Belle
Phil Armitage
Clement Baruteau
Myriam Benisty
Bertram Bitsch
Sijme-Jan Paardekooper
Christophe Pinte
Frederic Masset
Giovanni P Rosotti
Source :
Proceedings of SPIE. 9907
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2016.

Abstract

The Planet Formation Imager (PFI) project aims to provide a strong scientific vision for ground-based optical astronomy beyond the upcoming generation of Extremely Large Telescopes. We make the case that a breakthrough in angular resolution imaging capabilities is required in order to unravel the processes involved in planet formation. PFI will be optimised to provide a complete census of the protoplanet population at all stellocentric radii and over the age range from 0.1 to ~ 100 Myr. Within this age period, planetary systems undergo dramatic changes and the final architecture of planetary systems is determined. Our goal is to study the planetary birth on the natural spatial scale where the material is assembled, which is the “Hill Sphere” of the forming planet, and to characterise the protoplanetary cores by measuring their masses and physical properties. Our science working group has investigated the observational characteristics of these young protoplanets as well as the migration mechanisms that might alter the system architecture. We simulated the imprints that the planets leave in the disk and study how PFI could revolutionise areas ranging from exoplanet to extragalactic science. In this contribution we outline the key science drivers of PFI and discuss the requirements that will guide the technology choices, the site selection, and potential science/technology tradeoffs.

Details

Language :
English
ISBN :
978-1-5106-0194-9
978-1-5106-0193-2
ISBNs :
9781510601949 and 9781510601932
Volume :
9907
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Proceedings of SPIE
Notes :
NNA13AA93A, , ST/J004030/1
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20230001207
Document Type :
Report
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2231067