Bibcode
Kempton, E. M.-R.; Bean, Jacob L.; Louie, Dana R.; Deming, Drake; Koll, Daniel D. B.; Mansfield, Megan; Christiansen, Jessie L.; López-Morales, Mercedes; Swain, Mark R.; Zellem, Robert T.; Ballard, Sarah; Barclay, Thomas; Barstow, Joanna K.; Batalha, Natasha E.; Beatty, Thomas G.; Berta-Thompson, Zach; Birkby, Jayne; Buchhave, Lars A.; Charbonneau, David; Cowan, Nicolas B.; Crossfield, Ian; de Val-Borro, Miguel; Doyon, René; Dragomir, Diana; Gaidos, Eric; Heng, Kevin; Hu, Renyu; Kane, Stephen R.; Kreidberg, Laura; Mallonn, Matthias; Morley, Caroline V.; Narita, N.; Nascimbeni, Valerio; Pallé, E.; Quintana, Elisa V.; Rauscher, Emily; Seager, Sara; Shkolnik, Evgenya L.; Sing, David K.; Sozzetti, Alessandro; Stassun, Keivan G.; Valenti, Jeff A.; von Essen, Carolina
Bibliographical reference
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, Volume 130, Issue 993, pp. 114401 (2018).
Advertised on:
11
2018
Citations
404
Refereed citations
374
Description
A key legacy of the recently launched the Transiting Exoplanet Survey
Satellite (TESS) mission will be to provide the astronomical community
with many of the best transiting exoplanet targets for atmospheric
characterization. However, time is of the essence to take full advantage
of this opportunity. The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), although
delayed, will still complete its nominal five year mission on a timeline
that motivates rapid identification, confirmation, and mass measurement
of the top atmospheric characterization targets from TESS. Beyond JWST,
future dedicated missions for atmospheric studies such as the
Atmospheric Remote-sensing Infrared Exoplanet Large-survey (ARIEL)
require the discovery and confirmation of several hundred additional
sub-Jovian size planets (R p < 10 R ⊕)
orbiting bright stars, beyond those known today, to ensure a successful
statistical census of exoplanet atmospheres. Ground-based extremely
large telescopes (ELTs) will also contribute to surveying the
atmospheres of the transiting planets discovered by TESS. Here we
present a set of two straightforward analytic metrics, quantifying the
expected signal-to-noise in transmission and thermal emission
spectroscopy for a given planet, that will allow the top atmospheric
characterization targets to be readily identified among the TESS planet
candidates. Targets that meet our proposed threshold values for these
metrics would be encouraged for rapid follow-up and confirmation via
radial velocity mass measurements. Based on the catalog of simulated
TESS detections by Sullivan et al., we determine appropriate cutoff
values of the metrics, such that the TESS mission will ultimately yield
a sample of ∼300 high-quality atmospheric characterization targets
across a range of planet size bins, extending down to Earth-size,
potentially habitable worlds.
Related projects
Exoplanets and Astrobiology
The search for life in the universe has been driven by recent discoveries of planets around other stars (known as exoplanets), becoming one of the most active fields in modern astrophysics. The growing number of new exoplanets discovered in recent years and the recent advance on the study of their atmospheres are not only providing new valuable
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