TL;DR
This study assesses the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope's Coronagraph sensitivity to exozodiacal dust, quantifying detection limits and potential for observing habitable zone dust around nearby stars to aid future exoplanet imaging.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed sensitivity analysis of the Roman Coronagraph to exozodiacal dust, including detection thresholds and the number of observable systems.
Findings
Maximum 6 disks with observable inner habitable zones.
Median 5σ sensitivity of 12 zodi per resolution element.
Roman can detect exozodiacal disks in 13 systems with 95% confidence.
Abstract
Exozodiacal dust, warm debris from comets and asteroids in and near the habitable zone of stellar systems, reveals the physical processes that shape planetary systems. Scattered light from this dust is also a source of background flux which must be overcome by future missions to image Earthlike planets. This study quantifies the sensitivity of the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope Coronagraph to light scattered by exozodi, the zodiacal dust around other stars. Using a sample of 149 nearby stars, previously selected for optimum detection of habitable exoplanets by space observatories, we find the maximum number of exozodiacal disks with observable \textit{inner} habitable zone boundaries is six and the number of observable outer habitable boundaries is 74. One zodi was defined as the visible-light surface brightness of 22 arcsec around a solar-mass star, approximating…
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