The Molecular Hydrogen Explorer H2EX
F. Boulanger, J.P. Maillard, P. Appleton, E. Falgarone, G. Lagache, B., Schulz, B.P. Wakker, A. Bressan, J. Cernicharo, L. Drissen, G. Helou, T., Henning, T.L. Lim, E.A. Valentijn, and the H2EX collaboration

TL;DR
H2EX is a proposed space mission designed to observe molecular hydrogen in various cosmic environments, utilizing a high-resolution imaging Fourier Transform Spectrometer to study galaxy, star, and planet formation processes.
Contribution
This paper introduces the innovative design of H2EX, a space-based observatory with a unique IFTS instrument and wide field of view for comprehensive molecular hydrogen studies.
Findings
Designed to observe H2 rotational lines at high spectral resolution
Capable of surveying extended emission in galaxies and star-forming regions
Mission plan includes seven legacy programs over two years
Abstract
The Molecular Hydrogen Explorer, H2EX, was proposed in response to the ESA 2015 - 2025 Cosmic Vision Call as a medium class space mission with NASA and CSA participations. The mission, conceived to understand the formation of galaxies, stars and planets from molecular hydrogen, is designed to observe the first rotational lines of the H2 molecule (28.2, 17.0, 12.3 and 9.7 micron) over a wide field, and at high spectral resolution. H2EX can provide an inventory of warm (> 100 K) molecular gas in a broad variety of objects, including nearby young star clusters, galactic molecular clouds, active galactic nuclei, local and distant galaxies. The rich array of molecular, atomic and ionic lines, as well as solid state features available in the 8 to 29 micron spectral range brings additional science dimensions to H2EX. We present the optical and mechanical design of the H2EX payload based on an…
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