Characterising the Atmospheres of Transiting Planets with a Dedicated Space Telescope
M. Tessenyi, M. Ollivier, G. Tinetti, J.P. Beaulieu, V. Coud\'e du, Foresto, T. Encrenaz, G. Micela, B. Swinyard, I. Ribas, A. Aylward, J., Tennyson, M.R. Swain, A. Sozzetti, G. Vasisht, P. Deroo

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the potential of a dedicated 1.2/1.4m space telescope for characterizing exoplanet atmospheres through transit spectroscopy across a broad spectral range, emphasizing its capability to study diverse planets including habitable-zone super-Earths.
Contribution
It analyzes the performance of a proposed space telescope for exoplanet atmosphere characterization, demonstrating its ability to observe a wide range of planets including challenging targets.
Findings
A 1.2/1.4m space telescope can effectively perform transit spectroscopy of various exoplanets.
Even super-Earths in habitable zones around late-type stars are accessible with this mission.
The telescope's performance is promising for expanding exoplanet atmospheric studies.
Abstract
Exoplanetary science is among the fastest evolving fields of today's astronomical research. Ground-based planet-hunting surveys alongside dedicated space missions (Kepler, CoRoT) are delivering an ever-increasing number of exoplanets, now numbering at ~690, with ESA's GAIA mission planned to bring this number into the thousands. The next logical step is the characterisation of these worlds: what is their nature? Why are they as they are? The use of the HST and Spitzer Space Telescope to probe the atmospheres of transiting hot, gaseous exoplanets has demonstrated that it is possible with current technology to address this ambitious goal. The measurements have also shown the difficulty of understanding the physics and chemistry of these environments when having to rely on a limited number of observations performed on a handful of objects. To progress substantially in this field, a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
