The Large Ultraviolet/Optical/Infrared Surveyor
[摘要] Astronomy crossed a threshold three decades ago with the discovery of planets around other stars. Compared to scientists' previous expectations set by the Solar System, exoplanets are wonderfully abundant and varied. Indirect planet discovery techniques have shown that small rocky planets residing in stellar habitable zones, where such planets may have liquid water on their surfaces, are not rare. This revelation drives us to ask more ambitious and fundamental questions, that fascinate scientists and the public alike: are there other truly Earth-like planets out there and do any of them harbour life? Today, exoplanets are largely ‘small black shadows' to us, with measurements of orbits, sizes and masses (all three in the best cases).The upcoming James Webb Space Telescope and future 30-m-class ground-based telescopes will characterize the atmospheres of habitable planet candidates orbit in glow-mass M dwarf stars. However, deeply probing atmospheres of the exoplanets most similar to the Earth, those around Sun-like stars, remains out of reach for currently planned observatories. Bringing them within our grasp is a primary motivation for the Large UV/Optical/Infrared Surveyor(LUVOIR) mission concept, currently the focus of a three-year NASA study.
[发布日期] 2018-08-01 [发布机构]
[效力级别] [学科分类] 原子、分子光学和等离子物理
[关键词] DWARF STARS;EXTRASOLAR PLANETS;HABITABILITY;INFRARED ASTRONOMY;JAMES WEBB SPACE TELESCOPE;LUMINESCENCE;PLANETS;ULTRAVIOLET ASTRONOMY;MISSION PLANNING [时效性]