New Completeness Methods for Estimating Exoplanet Discoveries by Direct Detection
Robert A. Brown, Remi Soummer (Space Telescope Science Institute)

TL;DR
This paper introduces new methods for estimating exoplanet discoveries through direct imaging missions, enabling accurate predictions of outcomes and guiding mission design without extensive simulations.
Contribution
The paper presents novel analytical techniques for estimating detection probabilities and mission outcomes, improving efficiency and accuracy over traditional Monte Carlo simulations.
Findings
Estimated 5 habitable Earth-mass planets with high confidence
Achieved accurate occurrence rate (eta=0.3) estimation from a single simulation
Provided tools for mission and instrument design optimization
Abstract
We report new methods for evaluating realistic observing programs that search stars for planets by direct imaging, where observations are selected from an optimized star list, and where stars can be observed multiple times. We show how these methods bring critical insight into the design of the mission & its instruments. These methods provide an estimate of the outcome of the observing program: the probability distribution of discoveries (detection and/or characterization), & an estimate of the occurrence rate of planets (eta). We show that these parameters can be accurately estimated from a single mission simulation, without the need for a complete Monte Carlo mission simulation, & we prove the accuracy of this new approach. Our methods provide the tools to define a mission for a particular science goal, for example defined by the expected number of discoveries and its confidence…
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