Nulling interferometry: impact of exozodiacal clouds on the performance of future life-finding space missions
D. Defr\`ere, O. Absil, R. den Hartog, C. Hanot, and C. Stark

TL;DR
This paper evaluates how exozodiacal dust clouds affect the performance of future nulling interferometry missions aimed at detecting Earth-like planets, providing thresholds for dust density tolerances.
Contribution
It quantifies the impact of exozodiacal dust on nulling interferometry performance and establishes dust density limits for mission planning.
Findings
Tolerable exozodiacal dust density is about 100 times solar zodiacal cloud for survey goals.
Detection of Earth-like planets requires dust densities below approximately 15 times solar zodiacal.
Inclination of dust disks reduces the maximum tolerable dust density for planet detection.
Abstract
Earth-sized planets around nearby stars are being detected for the first time by ground-based radial velocity and space-based transit surveys. This milestone is opening the path towards the definition of missions able to directly detect the light from these planets, with the identification of bio-signatures as one of the main objectives. In that respect, both ESA and NASA have identified nulling interferometry as one of the most promising techniques. The ability to study distant planets will however depend on exozodiacal dust clouds surrounding the target stars. In this paper, we assess the impact of exozodiacal dust clouds on the performance of an infrared nulling interferometer in the Emma X-array configuration. For the nominal mission architecture with 2-m aperture telescopes, we found that point-symmetric exozodiacal dust discs about 100 times denser than the solar zodiacal cloud…
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