Skip to main content
SearchLoginLogin or Signup

High Contrast Imaging of Exoplanets and Exoplanetary Systems with JWST

Presentation #108.02 in the session “Extrasolar Planets I”.

Published onJun 18, 2021
High Contrast Imaging of Exoplanets and Exoplanetary Systems with JWST

Our accepted JWST Early Release Science (ERS) program, High Contrast Imaging of Exoplanets and Exoplanetary Systems with JWST, has been awarded ~54 hours of time and will perform: a) coronagraphic imaging of a directly imaged exoplanetary companion and a well-studied circumstellar debris disk from 3-15 microns, b) spectroscopy of a wide separation planetary mass companion from 2-28 microns and c) deep aperture masking interferometry of an exoplanetary companion at 4 microns.

Within the first few months of JWST operation, our program will rapidly produce publicly-available datasets in modes to be commonly used by the exoplanet/disk direct imaging communities. Ours will be among the first-ever direct observations of bona fide exoplanets across their full luminous spectral range, and will be crucial test cases for atmospheric models that have mostly focussed in the visible and near-infrared. Further, our program will demonstrate the degree to which atmospheric abundance analysis can be obtained from JWST spectroscopy, possibly providing clues to the planet formation process. Additionally, our program will provide measurements of the water-ice abundance within a debris disk in conjunction with constraints on the emission at the rising Wien tail of its spectral energy distribution.

Throughout this talk I will describe our planned observations in detail, in addition to how our international team of investigators will deliver science enabling products to empower a broad user base to develop successful future JWST investigations in Cycle 2 and beyond.

Comments
0
comment
No comments here