Transiting Exoplanet Studies and Community Targets for JWST's Early Release Science Program
Kevin B. Stevenson, Nikole K. Lewis, Jacob L. Bean, Charles Beichman,, Jonathan Fraine, Brian M. Kilpatrick, J.E. Krick, Joshua D. Lothringer, Avi, M. Mandell, Jeff A. Valenti, Eric Agol, Daniel Angerhausen, Joanna K., Barstow, Stephan M. Birkmann, Adam Burrows

TL;DR
This paper proposes an Early Release Science program for JWST to test observing modes on selected exoplanet targets, aiming to optimize future atmospheric characterization efforts with the telescope.
Contribution
It introduces a community-focused ERS program to evaluate JWST's capabilities for transiting exoplanet studies and identifies suitable targets for initial observations.
Findings
Identified 12 suitable community targets for JWST exoplanet observations.
Recommended preparatory observations to characterize target atmospheres.
Outlined testing strategies for JWST instrument performance and systematics.
Abstract
The James Webb Space Telescope will revolutionize transiting exoplanet atmospheric science due to its capability for continuous, long-duration observations and its larger collecting area, spectral coverage, and spectral resolution compared to existing space-based facilities. However, it is unclear precisely how well JWST will perform and which of its myriad instruments and observing modes will be best suited for transiting exoplanet studies. In this article, we describe a prefatory JWST Early Release Science (ERS) program that focuses on testing specific observing modes to quickly give the community the data and experience it needs to plan more efficient and successful future transiting exoplanet characterization programs. We propose a multi-pronged approach wherein one aspect of the program focuses on observing transits of a single target with all of the recommended observing modes to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · History and Developments in Astronomy
