Predicting exoplanet observability in time, contrast, separation and polarization, in scattered light
Guillaume Schworer, Peter G. Tuthill

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive model and visualization tool for predicting the observability of exoplanets through polarimetry, considering orbital, contrast, and polarization factors to aid future telescope observations.
Contribution
It introduces a new polarized-reflectance model and the SPOC diagram for assessing exoplanet detectability, with an open-source code for simulation and planning.
Findings
The model accurately predicts exoplanet signals based on orbital and reflectance parameters.
The SPOC diagram helps determine exoplanet detection feasibility.
The code is publicly available for community use and development.
Abstract
Polarimetry is one of the keys to enhanced direct imaging of exoplanets. Not only does it deliver a differential observable providing extra contrast, but when coupled with spectroscopy, it also reveals valuable information on the exoplanetary atmospheric composition. Nevertheless, angular separation and contrast ratio to the host-star make for extremely challenging observation. Producing detailed predictions for exactly how the expected signals should appear is of critical importance for the designs and observational strategies of tomorrow's telescopes. We aim at accurately determining the magnitudes and evolution of the main observational signatures for imaging an exoplanet: separation, contrast ratio to the host-star and polarization as a function of the orbital geometry and the reflectance parameters of the exoplanet. These parameters were used to construct polarized-reflectance…
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