Bibcode
Fujii, Yuka; Angerhausen, Daniel; Deitrick, Russell; Domagal-Goldman, Shawn; Grenfell, John Lee; Hori, Yasunori; Kane, Stephen R.; Pallé, E.; Rauer, Heike; Siegler, Nicholas; Stapelfeldt, Karl; Stevenson, Kevin B.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astrobiology, Volume 18, Issue 6, 2018, pp.739-778
Fecha de publicación:
6
2018
Revista
Número de citas
137
Número de citas referidas
119
Descripción
Exoplanet hunting efforts have revealed the prevalence of exotic worlds
with diverse properties, including Earth-sized bodies, which has fueled
our endeavor to search for life beyond the Solar System. Accumulating
experiences in astrophysical, chemical, and climatological
characterization of uninhabitable planets are paving the way to
characterization of potentially habitable planets. In this paper, we
review our possibilities and limitations in characterizing temperate
terrestrial planets with future observational capabilities through the
2030s and beyond, as a basis of a broad range of discussions on how to
advance "astrobiology" with exoplanets. We discuss the observability of
not only the proposed biosignature candidates themselves but also of
more general planetary properties that provide circumstantial evidence,
since the evaluation of any biosignature candidate relies on its
context. Characterization of temperate Earth-sized planets in the coming
years will focus on those around nearby late-type stars. The James Webb
Space Telescope (JWST) and later 30-meter-class ground-based telescopes
will empower their chemical investigations. Spectroscopic studies of
potentially habitable planets around solar-type stars will likely
require a designated spacecraft mission for direct imaging, leveraging
technologies that are already being developed and tested as part of the
Wide Field InfraRed Survey Telescope (WFIRST) mission. Successful
initial characterization of a few nearby targets will be an important
touchstone toward a more detailed scrutiny and a larger survey that are
envisioned beyond 2030. The broad outlook this paper presents may help
develop new observational techniques to detect relevant features as well
as frameworks to diagnose planets based on the observables.
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La búsqueda de vida en el Universo se ha visto impulsada por los recientes descubrimientos de planetas alrededor de otras estrellas (los llamados exoplanetas), convirtiéndose en uno de los campos más activos dentro de la Astrofísica moderna. En los últimos años los descubrimientos cada vez más numerosos de nuevos exoplanetas y los últimos avances
Enric
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