Origins space telescope: from first light to life

Experimental Astronomy Springer 51:3 (2021) 595-624

Authors:

MC Wiedner, S Aalto, L Armus, E Bergin, J Birkby, CM Bradford, D Burgarella, P Caselli, V Charmandaris, A Cooray, E De Beck, JM Desert, M Gerin, J Goicoechea, M Griffin, P Hartogh, F Helmich, M Hogerheijde, L Hunt, A Karska, Q Kral, D Leisawitz, G Melnick, M Meixner, M Matsuura, D Rigopoulou

Abstract:

Abstract The Origins Space Telescope (Origins) is one of four science and technology definition studies selected by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) in preparation of the 2020 Astronomy and Astrophysics Decadal survey in the US. Origins will trace the history of our origins from the time dust and heavy elements permanently altered the cosmic landscape to present-day life. It is designed to answer three major science questions: How do galaxies form stars, make metals, and grow their central supermassive black holes from reionization? How do the conditions for habitability develop during the process of planet formation? Do planets orbiting M-dwarf stars 91探花 life? Origins operates at mid- to far-infrared wavelengths from ~ 2.8 渭m to 588 渭m, and is more than 1000 times more sensitive than prior far-IR missions due to its cold (~ 4.5 K) aperture and state-of-the-art instruments.

Atmospheric characterization of terrestrial exoplanets in the mid-infrared: biosignatures, habitability, and diversity

Experimental Astronomy Springer Nature 54:2-3 (2021) 1197-1221

Authors:

Sp Quanz, O Absil, W Benz, X Bonfils, Jp Berger, D Defr猫re, E van Dishoeck, D Ehrenreich, J Fortney, A Glauser, Jl Grenfell, M Janson, S Kraus, O Krause, L Labadie, S Lacour, M Line, H Linz, J Loicq, Y Miguel, E Pall茅, D Queloz, H Rauer, I Ribas, S Rugheimer, F Selsis, I Snellen, A Sozzetti, Kr Stapelfeldt, S Udry, M Wyatt

Abstract:

Exoplanet science is one of the most thriving fields of modern astrophysics. A major goal is the atmospheric characterization of dozens of small, terrestrial exoplanets in order to search for signatures in their atmospheres that indicate biological activity, assess their ability to provide conditions for life as we know it, and investigate their expected atmospheric diversity. None of the currently adopted projects or missions, from ground or in space, can address these goals. In this White Paper, submitted to ESA in response to the Voyage 2050 Call, we argue that a large space-based mission designed to detect and investigate thermal emission spectra of terrestrial exoplanets in the mid-infrared wavelength range provides unique scientific potential to address these goals and surpasses the capabilities of other approaches. While NASA might be focusing on large missions that aim to detect terrestrial planets in reflected light, ESA has the opportunity to take leadership and spearhead the development of a large mid-infrared exoplanet mission within the scope of the 鈥淰oyage 2050鈥 long-term plan establishing Europe at the forefront of exoplanet science for decades to come. Given the ambitious science goals of such a mission, additional international partners might be interested in participating and contributing to a roadmap that, in the long run, leads to a successful implementation. A new, dedicated development program funded by ESA to help reduce development and implementation cost and further push some of the required key technologies would be a first important step in this direction. Ultimately, a large mid-infrared exoplanet imaging mission will be needed to help answer one of humankind鈥檚 most fundamental questions: 鈥淗ow unique is our Earth?鈥

HST PanCET Program: A Complete Near-UV to Infrared Transmission Spectrum for the Hot Jupiter WASP-79b

The Astronomical Journal IOP Publishing 162:4 (2021) 138-138

Authors:

Alexander D Rathcke, Ryan J MacDonald, Joanna K Barstow, Jayesh M Goyal, Mercedes Lopez-Morales, Jo茫o M Mendon莽a, Jorge Sanz-Forcada, Gregory W Henry, David K Sing, Munazza K Alam, Nikole K Lewis, Katy L Chubb, Jake Taylor, Nikolay Nikolov, Lars A Buchhave

Abstract:

The ExoMol database (www.exomol.com) provides molecular data for spectroscopic studies of hot atmospheres. These data are widely used to model atmospheres of exoplanets, cool stars and other astronomical objects, as well as a variety of terrestrial applications. The 2024 data release reports the current status of the database which contains recommended line lists for 91 molecules and 224 isotopologues giving a total of almost 10$^{12}$ individual transitions. New features of the database include extensive "MARVELization" of line lists to allow them to be used for high resolutions studies, extension of several line lists to ultraviolet wavelengths, provision of photodissociation cross sections and extended provision of broadening parameters. Some of the in-house data specifications have been rewritten in JSON and moved to conformity with other international standards. Data products, including specific heats, a database of lifetimes for plasma studies, and the ExoMolHR web app which allows exclusively high resolution data to be extracted, are discussed

A multispecies pseudoadiabat for simulating condensable-rich exoplanet atmospheres

ArXiv 2108.12902 (2021)

Authors:

RJ Graham, Tim Lichtenberg, Ryan Boukrouche, Ray Pierrehumbert

INFUSE: assembly and alignment of a rocket-borne FUV integral field spectrograph

Proceedings of SPIE--the International Society for Optical Engineering SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics 11821 (2021) 118210f-118210f-12

Authors:

Emily M Witt, Brian T Fleming, James C Green, Kevin France, Jack Williams, Takashi Sukegawa, Oswald Siegmund, Dana Chafetz, Matthias Tecza, Anika Levy, Alex Haughton