High Precision Astrometry Science in the Context of Space Mission Prospectives
Fabien Malbet (IPAG), Gary A. Mamon (IAP), Lucas Labadie, Alessandro, Sozzetti (OATo), Manon Lizzana (IPAG), Thierry L\'epine (LabHC), Alain, L\'eger (IAS), Pierre-Olivier Lagage (CEA)

TL;DR
This paper discusses advancing space-based astrometry to achieve sub-micro-arcsecond precision for detecting exoplanets and dark matter, emphasizing technological innovations like large CMOS sensors and interferometric calibration.
Contribution
It proposes a detailed technological framework and mission concepts for high-precision astrometry, expanding capabilities beyond current missions like Gaia.
Findings
Potential to detect rocky exoplanets in habitable zones.
Methodology for calibrating pixel positions with laser fringes.
Strategies for optical distortion correction using reference stars.
Abstract
Astrometry is one of the oldest branches of astronomy which measures the position, the proper motion and parallax of celestial objects. Following the Hipparcos and Gaia missions that have measured several billions of them using global astrometry, we propose to increase astrometry precision on pointed objects using differential astrometry in a large field in order to unravel rocky planets in habitable zones of stars in the Sun vicinity and investigate the nature of dark matter in galactic environments as recommended by the ESA Senior Committee in the Voyager 2050 prospective. Substantial technology developments in a number of critical areas is needed in order to reach the highest required precision of sub-micro-arcsecond. One of them is CMOS image sensors using the stitching technique to merge the multiple design structures on the wafer and produce array with very large number of pixels.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlanetary Science and Exploration · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Space Science and Extraterrestrial Life
