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The Large Interferometer For Exoplanets (LIFE): a space mission for mid-infrared nulling interferometry
Glauser, Adrian M.; Quanz, Sascha P.; Hansen, Jonah et al.
2024In Proceedings of SPIE: The International Society for Optical Engineering, p. 48
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Keywords :
Space; Mission; LIFE; exoplanets; Nulling; Inteferometry
Abstract :
[en] The Large Interferometer For Exoplanets (LIFE) is a proposed space mission that enables the spectral characterization of the thermal emission of exoplanets in the solar neighborhood. The mission is designed to search for global atmospheric biosignatures on dozens of temperate terrestrial exoplanets and it will naturally investigate the diversity of other worlds. Here, we review the status of the mission concept, discuss the key mission parameters, and outline the trade-offs related to the mission’s architecture. In preparation for an upcoming concept study, we define a mission baseline based on a free-formation flying constellation of a double Bracewell nulling interferometer that consists of 4 collectors and a central beam-combiner spacecraft. The interferometric baselines are between 10–600 m, and the estimated diameters of the collectors are at least 2 m (but will depend on the total achievable instrument throughput). The spectral required wavelength range is 6–16 μm (with a goal of 4–18.5 μm), hence cryogenic temperatures are needed both for the collectors and the beam combiners. One of the key challenges is the required deep, stable, and broad-band nulling performance while maintaining a high system throughput for the planet signal. Among many ongoing or needed technology development activities, the demonstration of the measurement principle under cryogenic conditions is fundamentally important for LIFE.
Disciplines :
Space science, astronomy & astrophysics
Author, co-author :
Glauser, Adrian M.
Quanz, Sascha P.
Hansen, Jonah
Dannert, Felix
Ireland, Michael J.
Linz, Hendrik
Absil, Olivier  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département d'astrophysique, géophysique et océanographie (AGO)
Alei, Eleonora
Angerhausen, Daniel
Birbacher, Thomas
Defrere, Denis  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département d'astrophysique, géophysique et océanographie (AGO) > Planetary & Stellar systems Imaging Laboratory
Fortier, Andrea
Huber, Philipp A.
Kammerer, Jens
Laugier, Romain
Lichtenberg, Tim
Noack, Lena
Ranganathan, Mohanakrishna
Rugheimer, Sarah
Airapetian, Vladimir
Alibert, Yann
Amado, Pedro J.
Anger, Marius
Anugu, Narsireddy
Aragon, Max
Armstrong, David J.
Balbi, Amedeo
Balsalobre-Ruza, Olga
Banik, Deepayan
Beck, Mathias
Bhattarai, Surendra
Biren, Jonas
Bottoni, Jacopo
Braam, Marrick
Brandeker, Alexis
Buchhave, Lars A.
Caballero, José A.
Cabrera, Juan
Carone, Ludmila
Carrión-González, Óscar
Castro-González, Amadeo
Chan, Kenny
Coelho, Ligia F.
Constantinou, Tereza
Cowan, Nicolas
Danchi, William
Dandumont, Colin  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Unités de recherche interfacultaires > Space sciences, Technologies and Astrophysics Research (STAR)
Davoult, Jeanne
Dawn, Arjun
de Vera, Jean-Pierre P.
de Visser, Pieter J.
Dorn, Caroline
Duque Lara, Juan A.
Elowitz, Mark
Ertel, Steve
Fang, Yuedong
Felix, Simon
Fortney, Jonathan
Fridlund, Malcolm
García Muñoz, Antonio
Gillmann, Cedric
Golabek, Gregor
Grenfell, John L.
Guidi, Greta
Guilera, Octavio
Hagelberg, Janis
Hansen, Janina
Haqq-Misra, Jacob
Hara, Nathan
Helled, Ravit
Herbst, Konstantin
Hernitschek, Nina
Hinkley, Sasha
Ito, Takahiro
Itoh, Satoshi
Ivanovski, Stavro
Janson, Markus
Johansen, Anders
Jones, Hugh
Kane, Stephen
Kitzmann, Daniel
Kovacevic, Andjelka B.
Kraus, Stefan
Krause, Oliver
Kruijssen, J. M. Diederik
Kuiper, Rolf
Kuriakose, Alen
Labadie, Lucas
Lacour, Sylvestre
Lanza, Antonino F.
Leedjärv, Laurits
Lendl, Monika
Leung, Michaela
Lillo-Box, Jorge
Loicq, Jerôme  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Centres généraux > CSL (Centre Spatial de Liège)
Luque, Rafael
Mahadevan, Suvrath
Majumdar, Liton
Malbet, Fabien
Mallia, Franco
Mathew, Joice
Matsuo, Taro
Matthews, Elisabeth
Meadows, Victoria
Mennesson, Bertrand
Meyer, Michael R.
Molaverdikhani, Karan
Mollière, Paul
Monnier, John
Navarro, Ramon
Nsamba, Benard
Oguri, Kenshiro
Oza, Apurva
Palle, Enric
Persson, Carina
Pitman, Joe
Plávalová, Eva
Pozuelos, Francisco J.
Quirrenbach, Andreas
Ramirez, Ramses
Reiners, Ansgar
Ribas, Ignasi
Rice, Malena
Ricketti, Berke C.
Roelfsema, Peter
Romagnolo, Amedeo
Ronco, María P.
Schlecker, Martin
Schonhut-Stasik, Jessica
Schwieterman, Edward
Sefilian, Antranik A.
Serabyn, Eugene
Shahi, Chinmay
Sharma, Siddhant
Silva, Laura
Singh, Swapnil
Sneed, Evan L.
Spencer, Locke
Squicciarini, Vito
Staguhn, Johannes
Stapelfeldt, Karl
Stassun, Keivan
Tamura, Motohide
Taysum, Benjamin
van der Tak, Floris
van Kempen, Tim A.
Vasisht, Gautam
Wang, Haiyang S.
Wordsworth, Robin
Wyatt, Mark
More authors (140 more) Less
Language :
English
Title :
The Large Interferometer For Exoplanets (LIFE): a space mission for mid-infrared nulling interferometry
Publication date :
28 August 2024
Event name :
SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation 2024
Event place :
Yokohama, Japan
Event date :
du 16 juin au 21 juin 2024
By request :
Yes
Audience :
International
Journal title :
Proceedings of SPIE: The International Society for Optical Engineering
ISSN :
0277-786X
eISSN :
1996-756X
Publisher :
International Society for Optical Engineering, Bellingham, United States - Washington
Pages :
48
Peer reviewed :
Editorial Reviewed verified by ORBi
Funding text :
Part of this work has been carried out within the framework of the National Centre of Competence in Research PlanetS supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation under grant 51NF40 205606. The authors acknowledge the financial support of the SNSF.
Available on ORBi :
since 31 August 2024

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