ArXiv TLDR

Characterizing Earth analogs may require a moderate or high-resolution spectrograph

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2604.17554

Jean-Baptiste Ruffio, Sarah Steiger, Corey Spohn, Bruce Macintosh, Dimitri Mawet + 14 more

astro-ph.IMastro-ph.EP

TLDR

Detecting biosignatures on Earth analogs with HWO requires moderate to high-resolution spectrographs to overcome noise and maximize sensitivity.

Key contributions

  • Developed a simulation toolkit using EXOSIMS to evaluate spectrograph resolution for biosignature detection.
  • Simulated Earth analog observations around 164 stars to assess detector and speckle noise.
  • Found moderate/high resolution (R>1,000) spectrographs provide superior sensitivity for key molecules.
  • Low resolution (R~140) may be entirely suppressed by correlated speckle noise, hindering detection.

Why it matters

This study provides crucial insights for designing the Habitable Worlds Observatory, emphasizing the need for moderate to high-resolution spectrographs. It demonstrates how spectral resolution directly impacts the detectability of biosignatures and the ability to overcome noise. This work is vital for optimizing future exoplanet missions.

Original Abstract

A primary goal of the Habitable Worlds Observatory (HWO) is to detect and measure the abundance of biosignature molecules, such as water (H2O) and oxygen (O2), in the atmosphere of Earth analogs. This is expected to require deep spectroscopic observations lasting hundreds of hours per planet. In this context, it is essential to optimize the spectral resolution of the spectrograph to both maximize the number of planets that can be studied over the lifetime of the mission, and also to reduce the risks of false detections. The purpose of this work is to provide a framework to explore the spectral resolution design trade-space for HWO. This framework must be valid and comparable across all spectral resolutions from low (R<100) to high resolutions (R>10,000), and account for the spectral correlation of the residual starlight (i.e., speckle noise chromaticity). Leveraging the concept of "template matching", we develop a simulation toolkit based on the Python package EXOSIMS to compute the detection significance of planets and molecules. We then simulate observations of Earth analogs around 164 stars using representative mission parameters to explore the effects of the detector noise and the correlated speckle noise floor. Our findings suggest that a moderate or high resolution spectrograph (R>1,000) will provide higher sensitivity to critical molecules compared to a low resolution spectroscopy mode (e.g., R~140). The correlated speckle noise may also entirely suppress our ability to detect bio-signatures at low spectral resolutions. We conclude that a more comprehensive study combined with detailed models of its stability, and other sources of correlated noise, is necessary to fully explore the trade space of spectral resolution and detectability of key species.

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