Paper
19 September 2007 Planet-finding performance of the TPF-I Emma architecture
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The NASA Terrestrial Planet Finder Interferometer (TPF-I) and ESA Darwin missions are designed to directly detect mid-infrared photons from earth-like planets around nearby stars. Until recently, the baseline TPF-I design was the planar stretched X-Array, in which the four collectors spacecraft lie on the corners of a rectangle with the combiner spacecraft at the center, all in the plane normal to the direction to the target star. The stretched X-Array has two major advantages over other configurations: the angular resolution is very high, and the ability to eliminate instability noise. A direct consequence of the latter is that the null depth requirement is relaxed from 10-6 to 10-5. Implementation of the planar configuration requires a significant number of deployments, however, including large sunshades and secondary mirror supports. ESA had been pursuing a non-planar configuration with 3 collector telescopes. Dubbed the 'Emma' architecture (after the wife of Charles Darwin), this approach brings the combiner spacecraft up out of the plane of the collectors, and offers significant simplifications in the collector design with minimal deployments. The Emma X-Array combines the best aspects of each design, bringing together the 4-collector stretched X-Array collector configuration with the out-of-plane combiner of the Emma geometry. Both the TPF-I and Darwin missions have now adopted the Emma X-Array as the baseline design, moving a step closer to a single, joint TPF/Darwin mission. In this paper we assess the planet-finding performance of the Emma X-Array. An optimized completeness algorithm is used to estimate the number of Earths that can be found as a function of collector diameter. Other key parameters − the inner and outer working angles and the angular resolution − are also addressed.
© (2007) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Oliver P. Lay, Stefan R. Martin, and Sarah L. Hunyadi "Planet-finding performance of the TPF-I Emma architecture", Proc. SPIE 6693, Techniques and Instrumentation for Detection of Exoplanets III, 66930A (19 September 2007); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.732230
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Cited by 10 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Planets

Stars

Space operations

Signal to noise ratio

Spatial resolution

Mirrors

Photons

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