http://arxiv.org/abs/2101.01276
The addition of an external starshade to the {\it Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope} will enable the direct imaging of Earth-radius planets orbiting at $\sim$1 AU. Classification of any detected planets as Earth-like requires both spectroscopy to characterize their atmospheres and multi-epoch imaging to trace their orbits. We consider here the ability of the Starshade Rendezvous Probe to constrain the orbits of directly imaged Earth-like planets. The target list for this proposed mission consists of the 16 nearby stars best suited for direct imaging. The field of regard for a starshade mission is constrained by solar exclusion angles, resulting in four observing windows during a two-year mission. We find that for habitable-zone planetary orbits that are detected at least three times during the four viewing opportunities, their semi-major axes are measured with a median precision of 7 mas, or a median fractional precision of 3\%. Habitable-zone planets can be correctly identified as such 96.7\% of the time, with a false positive rate of 2.8\%. If a more conservative criteria is used for habitable-zone classification (95\% probability), the false positive rate drops close to zero, but with only 81\% of the truly Earth-like planets correctly classified as residing in the habitable zone.
A. Romero-Wolf, G. Bryden, G. Agnes, et. al.
Wed, 6 Jan 21
70/82
Comments: N/A
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