The CHEOPS mission
Willy Benz, Christopher Broeg, Andrea Fortier, Nicola Rando, Thomas, Beck, Mathias Beck, Didier Queloz, David Ehrenreich, Pierre Maxted, Kate, Isaak, Nicolas Billot, Yann Alibert, Roi Alonso, Carlos Ant\'onio, Joel, Asquier, Timothy Bandy, Tamas B\'arczy, David Barrado

TL;DR
CHEOPS is a space telescope dedicated to high-precision photometry of bright stars to detect and characterize exoplanet transits, improving existing measurements and identifying prime targets for atmospheric studies.
Contribution
First small ESA mission focused on exoplanet transit detection with ultrahigh precision photometry on bright stars, providing valuable data for future atmospheric characterization.
Findings
Achieves 20 ppm photometric precision for Earth-size planets on G5 stars.
Detects Neptune-size planets with 85 ppm precision on K stars.
Provides 20% of observing time to the scientific community annually.
Abstract
The CHaracterising ExOPlanet Satellite (CHEOPS) was selected in 2012, as the first small mission in the ESA Science Programme and successfully launched in December 2019. CHEOPS is a partnership between ESA and Switzerland with important contributions by ten additional ESA Member States. CHEOPS is the first mission dedicated to search for transits of exoplanets using ultrahigh precision photometry on bright stars already known to host planets. As a follow-up mission, CHEOPS is mainly dedicated to improving, whenever possible, existing radii measurements or provide first accurate measurements for a subset of those planets for which the mass has already been estimated from ground-based spectroscopic surveys and to following phase curves. CHEOPS will provide prime targets for future spectroscopic atmospheric characterisation. Requirements on the photometric precision and stability have…
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