Infrared Detection and Characterization of Debris Disks, Exozodiacal Dust, and Exoplanets: The FKSI Mission Concept
W. C. Danchi, R. K. Barry, B. Lopez, S. Rinehart, O. Absil, J.-C., Augereau, H. Beust, X. Bonfils, P. Borde, Denis Defrere, Pierre Kern, P., Lawson, A. Leger, J.-L. Monin, D. Mourard, M. Ollivier, R. Petrov, W. Traub,, S. Unwin, F. Vakili

TL;DR
FKSI is a proposed infrared interferometer mission designed to detect and characterize exoplanets, debris disks, and exozodiacal dust, enabling detailed study of nearby planetary systems.
Contribution
This paper introduces the FKSI mission concept, detailing its design, capabilities, and potential scientific impact in exoplanet and debris disk research.
Findings
Detects exozodiacal emission levels comparable to our solar system.
Characterizes atmospheres of known non-transiting exoplanets.
Surveys nearby stars for planets down to 2 Earth radii.
Abstract
The Fourier-Kelvin Stellar Interferometer (FKSI) is a mission concept for a nulling interferometer for the near-to-mid-infrared spectral region. FKSI is conceived as a mid-sized strategic or Probe class mission. FKSI has been endorsed by the Exoplanet Community Forum 2008 as such a mission and has been costed to be within the expected budget. The current design of FKSI is a two-element nulling interferometer. The two telescopes, separated by 12.5 m, are precisely pointed (by small steering mirrors) on the target star. The two path lengths are accurately controlled to be the same to within a few nanometers. A phase shifter/beam combiner (Mach-Zehnder interferometer) produces an output beam consisting of the nulled sum of the target planet's light and the host star's light. When properly oriented, the starlight is nulled by a factor of 10^-4, and the planet light is undiminished. Accurate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
