A New Approach to Compiling Exoatmospheric Target Lists And Quantifying the Ground-Based Resources Needed to Vet Them
Jennifer A. Burt, Robert T. Zellem, David R. Ciardi, Shubham Kanodia, Geoffrey Bryden, Tiffany Kataria, Kyle A. Pearson, Jessie L. Christiansen, Charles Beichman, B.J. Fulton, Mark Swain

TL;DR
This paper presents a new method for creating large exoatmospheric target lists by combining spectral metrics with diverse sampling, and assesses the ground-based resources needed for effective exoplanet atmospheric studies.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach to constructing exoatmospheric survey lists and quantifies the ground-based telescope time required for target vetting.
Findings
Hundreds of hours of space-based observing could be wasted due to ephemeris uncertainties.
Ground-based telescope time needed exceeds 100 nights of 10m class telescopes.
Recommendations are provided to improve efficiency of exoplanet atmospheric characterization efforts.
Abstract
Transiting exoplanet atmospheric characterization is currently in a golden age as dozens of exoplanet atmospheres are being studied by NASA's Hubble and James Webb Space Telescopes. This trend is expected to continue with NASA's Pandora Smallsat and Roman Space Telescope and ESA's Ariel mission (all expected to launch within this decade) and NASA's Habitable Worlds Observatory (expected to launch in the early 2040s) all of which are centered around studying the atmospheres of exoplanets. Here we explore a new approach to constructing large scale exoatmospheric survey lists, which combines the use of traditional transmission/emission spectroscopy figures of merit with a focus on more-evenly sampling planets across a range of radii and equilibrium temperatures. After assembling a sample target list comprised of 750 transmission spectroscopy targets and 150 emission spectroscopy targets,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
