Presentation + Paper
23 August 2024 Progress in the Earth 2.0 (ET) space mission
Jian Ge, Hui Zhang, Yongshuai Zhang, Yan Li, Dan Zhou, Haijiao Jiang, Pengjun Zhang, Xinyu Yao, Jiapeng Zhu, Yong Yu, Congcong Zhang, Zhenghong Tang, Jianqing Cai, Chaoyan Wang, Hongping Deng, Wen Chen, Kun Chen, Yingquan Yang, Xuliang Duan, Haoyu Wang, Jiangjiang Huang, Yang Gao, Yifei Wang, Lei Huang, Genjian Qin, Xinyu Liu, Yonghe Chen, Feng Dong, Yutian Fu, Baoyu Yang, Chuanxin Wei, Xianyi Zhou, Yanwu Kang, Lingfeng Huang, Boneng Xiong, Junfei Li, Zongxi Song, Wei Gao, Wei Li, Fengtao Wang, Pengfei Cheng, Chao Shen, Yue Pan, Jian Wang, Hongfei Zhang, Hui Wang, Qi Feng, Zhiyi Liu, Zhe Geng, Jie Gao, Qinghui Wu, Dapeng Jiang, Liangbi Su, Longxiang Li, Lin Wen, Yudong Li, Jie Feng, Lianguo Wang, Meng Bai, Haitao Li, Weicheng Zang, Hongjing Yang, Shude Mao, Wei Zhu, Sharon Xuesong Wang, Jilin Zhou, Jiwei Xie, Huigen Liu, Kevin Willis
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The Earth 2.0 (ET) space mission has entered its phase B study in China. It seeks to understand how frequently habitable Earth-like planets orbit solar-type stars (Earth 2.0s), the formation and evolution of terrestrial-like planets, and the origin of free-floating planets. The final design of ET includes six 28 cm diameter transit telescope systems, each with a field of view of 550 square degrees, and one 35 cm diameter microlensing telescope with a field of view of 4 square degrees. In transit mode, ET will continuously monitor over 2 million FGKM dwarfs in the original Kepler field and its neighboring fields for four years. Simultaneously, in microlensing mode, it will observe over 30 million I < 20.5 stars in the Galactic bulge direction. Simulations indicate that ET mission could identify approximately 40,000 new planets, including about 4,000 terrestrial-like planets across a wide range of orbital periods and in the interstellar space, ~1000 microlensing planets, ~10 Earth 2.0s and around 25 free-floating Earth mass planets. Coordinated observations with ground-based KMTNet telescopes will enable the measurement of masses for ~300 microlensing planets, helping determine the mass distribution functions of free-floating planets and cold planets. ET will operate from the Earth-Sun L2 halo orbit with a designed lifetime exceeding 4 years. The phase B study involves detailed design and engineering development of the transit and microlensing telescopes. Updates on this mission study are reported.
Conference Presentation
(2024) Published by SPIE. Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Jian Ge, Hui Zhang, Yongshuai Zhang, Yan Li, Dan Zhou, Haijiao Jiang, Pengjun Zhang, Xinyu Yao, Jiapeng Zhu, Yong Yu, Congcong Zhang, Zhenghong Tang, Jianqing Cai, Chaoyan Wang, Hongping Deng, Wen Chen, Kun Chen, Yingquan Yang, Xuliang Duan, Haoyu Wang, Jiangjiang Huang, Yang Gao, Yifei Wang, Lei Huang, Genjian Qin, Xinyu Liu, Yonghe Chen, Feng Dong, Yutian Fu, Baoyu Yang, Chuanxin Wei, Xianyi Zhou, Yanwu Kang, Lingfeng Huang, Boneng Xiong, Junfei Li, Zongxi Song, Wei Gao, Wei Li, Fengtao Wang, Pengfei Cheng, Chao Shen, Yue Pan, Jian Wang, Hongfei Zhang, Hui Wang, Qi Feng, Zhiyi Liu, Zhe Geng, Jie Gao, Qinghui Wu, Dapeng Jiang, Liangbi Su, Longxiang Li, Lin Wen, Yudong Li, Jie Feng, Lianguo Wang, Meng Bai, Haitao Li, Weicheng Zang, Hongjing Yang, Shude Mao, Wei Zhu, Sharon Xuesong Wang, Jilin Zhou, Jiwei Xie, Huigen Liu, and Kevin Willis "Progress in the Earth 2.0 (ET) space mission", Proc. SPIE 13092, Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2024: Optical, Infrared, and Millimeter Wave, 1309218 (23 August 2024); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3018669
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KEYWORDS
Planets

Telescopes

Stars

Satellites

Exoplanets

CMOS sensors

Photometry

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