Large Interferometer For Exoplanets (LIFE): III. Spectral resolution, wavelength range and sensitivity requirements based on atmospheric retrieval analyses of an exo-Earth
B.S. Konrad, E. Alei, D. Angerhausen, \'O. Carri\'on-Gonz\'alez, J.J., Fortney, J.L. Grenfell, D. Kitzmann, P. Molli\`ere, S. Rugheimer, F., Wunderlich, S.P. Quanz, the LIFE Collaboration

TL;DR
This study assesses the spectral resolution, wavelength range, and sensitivity needed for a space-based mid-infrared interferometer to characterize Earth-like exoplanets, focusing on atmospheric detection and property retrieval.
Contribution
It provides first estimates for observational requirements and demonstrates atmospheric retrieval capabilities using simulated LIFE mission data for Earth-twin exoplanets.
Findings
Water, CO2, and O3 detectable at S/N ≥ 10
Upper limits for N2O established
Surface and atmospheric properties can be accurately retrieved
Abstract
Temperate terrestrial exoplanets are likely common objects, but their discovery and characterization is very challenging. Concepts for optimized space missions to overcome these challenges are being studied. The LIFE initiative focuses on the development of a space-based mid-infrared (MIR) nulling interferometer probing the thermal emission of a large sample of exoplanets. We derive first estimates for the signal-to-noise (S/N), spectral resolution (R), and wavelength requirements for LIFE. Using an Earth-twin exoplanet as reference case, we quantify how well planetary/atmospheric properties can be constrained from MIR spectra of different quality. We simulate LIFE observations of an Earth-twin orbiting a G2V star at 10 pc from the Sun with different levels of exozodiacal dust emissions. We combine a cloud-free 1D radiative transfer model and the nested sampling algorithm to…
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