On High-Contrast Characterization of Nearby, Short-Period Exoplanets with Giant Segmented-Mirror Telescopes
Ian J. M. Crossfield

TL;DR
This paper predicts the number and types of nearby short-period exoplanets accessible for high-contrast imaging with future giant segmented-mirror telescopes, emphasizing potential for thermal infrared characterization of small, cool planets.
Contribution
It provides conservative estimates of nearby exoplanets accessible for high-contrast imaging, highlighting the potential for thermal infrared observations and identifying promising known planets for future study.
Findings
Approximately 10 planets within 8 pc are accessible for characterization.
Mid-infrared observations are more sensitive to smaller, cooler planets.
Several known radial velocity planets are suitable for near-infrared high-contrast imaging.
Abstract
Measurements of the frequency with which short-period planets occur around main sequence stars allows a direct prediction of the number and types of such planets that will be amenable to characterization by high-contrast instruments on future giant segmented- mirror telescopes (GSMTs). Adopting conservative assumptions, I predict of order 10 planets with radii R_P=1-8 R_Earth and equilibrium temperatures <400 K should be accessible around stars within 8 pc of the Sun. These numbers are roughly the same for both near-infrared observations of scattered starlight and mid-infrared observations of planetary thermal emission, with the latter observations demonstrating greater relative sensitivity to smaller and cooler planets. Adopting the conservative assumption that planets with R_P=1-2 R_E and 2-4 R_E occur with equal frequency, I predict a 40% chance that a planet with R_P=1-2 R_E and…
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