Large Interferometer For Exoplanets (LIFE): I. Improved exoplanet detection yield estimates for a large mid-infrared space-interferometer mission
S.P. Quanz, M. Ottiger, E. Fontanet, J. Kammerer, F. Menti, F., Dannert, A. Gheorghe, O. Absil, V.S. Airapetian, E. Alei, R. Allart, D., Angerhausen, S. Blumenthal, L.A. Buchhave, J. Cabrera, \'O., Carri\'on-Gonz\'alez, G. Chauvin, W.C. Danchi, C. Dandumont, D. Defr\`ere, C.

TL;DR
This study estimates the detection capabilities of a proposed space-based mid-infrared interferometer for exoplanets, showing it could identify hundreds of planets, including many potentially habitable rocky worlds, within a few years.
Contribution
It provides detailed detection yield estimates for a large space interferometer, considering various configurations and observing strategies, advancing planning for future exoplanet missions.
Findings
Up to ~550 exoplanets detected in 2.5 years with 4x2m apertures.
Approximately 25-45 rocky habitable zone planets detected.
Detection yield increases with larger aperture sizes, up to ~770 planets with 3.5m apertures.
Abstract
One of the long-term goals of exoplanet science is the atmospheric characterization of dozens of small exoplanets in order to understand their diversity and search for habitable worlds and potential biosignatures. Achieving this goal requires a space mission of sufficient scale. We seek to quantify the exoplanet detection performance of a space-based mid-infrared nulling interferometer that measures the thermal emission of exoplanets. For this, we have developed an instrument simulator that considers all major astrophysical noise sources and coupled it with Monte Carlo simulations of a synthetic exoplanet population around main-sequence stars within 20 pc. This allows us to quantify the number (and types) of exoplanets that our mission concept could detect over a certain time period. Two different scenarios to distribute the observing time among the stellar targets are discussed and…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
