Status Report

Observing Exoplanets with High Dispersion Coronagraphy. I. The scientific potential of current and next-generation large ground and space telescopes

By SpaceRef Editor
March 5, 2017
Filed under , , ,

Direct imaging of exoplanets presents a formidable technical challenge owing to the small angular separation and high contrast between exoplanets and their host stars.

High Dispersion Coronagraphy (HDC) is a pathway to achieve unprecedented sensitivity to Earth-like planets in the habitable zone. Here, we present a framework to simulate HDC observations and data analyses. The goal of these simulations is to perform a detailed analysis of the trade-off between raw star light suppression and spectral resolution for various instrument configurations, target types, and science cases. We predict the performance of an HDC instrument at Keck observatory for characterizing directly imaged gas-giant planets in near infrared bands. We also simulate HDC observations of an Earth-like planet using next-generation ground-based (TMT) and spaced-base telescopes (HabEx and LUVOIR).

We conclude that ground-based ELTs are more suitable for HDC observations of an Earth-like planet than future space-based missions owing to the considerable difference in collecting area. For ground-based telescopes, HDC observations can detect an Earth-like planet in the habitable zone around an M dwarf star at 10−4 starlight suppression level. Compared to the 10−7 planet/star contrast, HDC relaxes the starlight suppression requirement by a factor of 103. For space-based telescopes, detector noise will be a major limitation at spectral resolutions higher than 104. Considering detector noise and speckle chromatic noise, R=400 (1600) is the optimal spectral resolutions for HabEx(LUVOIR). The corresponding starlight suppression requirement to detect a planet with planet/star contrast=6.1×10−11 is relaxed by a factor of 10 (100) for HabEx (LUVOIR).

Ji Wang, Dimitri Mawet, Garreth Ruane, Renyu Hu, Bjorn Benneke
(Submitted on 2 Mar 2017)

Comments:    28 pages, 21 figures, 8 tables, accepted by ApJ
Subjects:    Earth and Planetary Astrophysics (astro-ph.EP); Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM)
Cite as:    arXiv:1703.00582 [astro-ph.EP] (or arXiv:1703.00582v1 [astro-ph.EP] for this version)
Submission history
From: Ji Wang
[v1] Thu, 2 Mar 2017 01:47:10 GMT (4883kb,D)
https://arxiv.org/abs/1703.00582

SpaceRef staff editor.