The EChO science case
Giovanna Tinetti, Pierre Drossart, Paul Eccleston, Paul Hartogh, Kate, Isaak, Martin Linder, Christophe Lovis, Giusi Micela, Marc Ollivier, Ludovic, Puig, Ignasi Ribas, Ignas Snellen, Bruce Swinyard. France Allard, Joanna, Barstow, James Cho, Athena Coustenis, Charles Cockell

TL;DR
The paper discusses the EChO mission, a dedicated space observatory designed to characterize the atmospheres of diverse exoplanets to understand their composition and origins, leveraging upcoming surveys and advanced spectroscopy.
Contribution
It introduces the EChO mission concept, detailing its design, capabilities, and scientific goals for exoplanet atmospheric characterization.
Findings
EChO can observe a wide range of exoplanet atmospheres.
The mission aims to analyze hundreds of exoplanets within four years.
EChO's spectral coverage enables detailed atmospheric composition measurements.
Abstract
The discovery of almost 2000 exoplanets has revealed an unexpectedly diverse planet population. Observations to date have shown that our Solar System is certainly not representative of the general population of planets in our Milky Way. The key science questions that urgently need addressing are therefore: What are exoplanets made of? Why are planets as they are? What causes the exceptional diversity observed as compared to the Solar System? EChO (Exoplanet Characterisation Observatory) has been designed as a dedicated survey mission for transit and eclipse spectroscopy capable of observing a large and diverse planet sample within its four-year mission lifetime. EChO can target the atmospheres of super-Earths, Neptune-like, and Jupiter-like planets, in the very hot to temperate zones (planet temperatures of 300K-3000K) of F to M-type host stars. Over the next ten years, several new…
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