Importance of Sample Selection in Exoplanet Atmosphere Population Studies
Natasha E. Batalha, Angie Wolfgang, Johanna Teske, Munazza K. Alam,, Lili Alderson, Natalie M. Batalha, Mercedes L\'opez-Morales, Hannah R., Wakeford

TL;DR
This study investigates how different sample selection methods for exoplanet atmospheric studies with JWST affect the accuracy of population-level inferences, emphasizing the importance of selection criteria in robustly constraining planetary trends.
Contribution
It demonstrates that quantitative or evenly-spaced sample selection methods yield more reliable population parameter constraints than other approaches.
Findings
Quantitative and evenly-spaced samples provide robust population constraints.
Target selection for individual atmospheres does not guarantee population-level insights.
Multi-cycle JWST observations are likely necessary for reliable population studies.
Abstract
Understanding planet formation requires robust population studies, which are designed to reveal trends in planet properties. In this work, we aim to determine if different methods for selecting populations of exoplanets for atmospheric characterization with JWST could influence population-level inferences. We generate three hypothetical surveys of super-Earths/sub-Neptunes, each spanning a similar radius-insolation flux space. The survey samples are constructed based on three different selection criteria (evenly-spaced-by-eye, binned, and a quantitative selection function). Using an injection-recovery technique, we test how robustly individual-planet atmospheric parameters and population-level parameters can be retrieved. We find that all three survey designs result in equally suitable targets for individual atmospheric characterization, but not equally suitable targets for constraining…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
