Comparative Planetology and the Search for Life Beyond the Solar System
Charles A. Beichman, Malcolm Fridlund, Wesley A. Traub, Karl R., Stapelfeldt, Andreas Quirrenbach, Sara Seager

TL;DR
This paper discusses the emerging field of comparative planetology beyond our solar system, emphasizing upcoming observational methods and missions to detect and study habitable exoplanets and potential extraterrestrial life.
Contribution
It outlines the planned observational strategies, missions, and technological advancements necessary for detecting and understanding habitable exoplanets and their environments.
Findings
Upcoming surveys will identify a wide range of exoplanets.
Next-generation observatories will directly detect photons from habitable zone planets.
Integration of multiple measurement techniques will enhance understanding of planetary environments.
Abstract
The study of planets beyond the solar system and the search for other habitable planets and life is just beginning. Ground-based (radial velocity and transits) and space-based surveys (transits and astrometry) will identify planets spanning a wide range of size and orbital location, from Earth-sized objects within 1 AU to giant planets beyond 5 AU, orbiting stars as near as a few parsec and as far as a kiloparsec. After this initial reconnaissance, the next generation of space observatories will directly detect photons from planets in the habitable zones of nearby stars. The synergistic combination of measurements of mass from astrometry and radial velocity, of radius and composition from transits, and the wealth of information from the direct detection of visible and mid-IR photons will create a rich field of comparative planetology. Information on proto-planetary and debris disks will…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpace Science and Extraterrestrial Life · Astro and Planetary Science
