The PLATO mission

Rauer, Heike; Aerts, Conny; Cabrera, Juan; Deleuil, Magali; Erikson, Anders; Gizon, Laurent; Goupil, Mariejo; Heras, Ana; Walloschek, Thomas; Lorenzo-Alvarez, Jose; Marliani, Filippo; Martin-Garcia, César; Mas-Hesse, J. Miguel; O'Rourke, Laurence; Osborn, Hugh; Pagano, Isabella; Piotto, Giampaolo; Pollacco, Don; Ragazzoni, Roberto; Ramsay, Gavin; Udry, Stéphane; Appourchaux, Thierry; Benz, Willy; Brandeker, Alexis; Güdel, Manuel; Janot-Pacheco, Eduardo; Kabath, Petr; Kjeldsen, Hans; Min, Michiel; Santos, Nuno; Smith, Alan; Suarez, Juan-Carlos; Werner, Stephanie C.; Aboudan, Alessio; Abreu, Manuel; Acuña, Lorena; Adams, Moritz; Adibekyan, Vardan; Affer, Laura; Agneray, François; Agnor, Craig; Aguirre Børsen-Koch, Victor; Ahmed, Saad; Aigrain, Suzanne; Al-Bahlawan, Ashraf; Alcacera Gil, Ma de los Angeles; Alei, Eleonora; Alencar, Silvia; Alexander, Richard; Alfonso-Garzón, Julia; Alibert, Yann; Allende Prieto, Carlos; Almeida, Leonardo; Alonso Sobrino, Roi; Altavilla, Giuseppe; Althaus, Christian; Alvarez Trujillo, Luis Alonso; Amarsi, Anish; Ammler-von Eiff, Matthias; Amôres, Eduardo; Andrade, Laerte; Antoniadis-Karnavas, Alexandros; António, Carlos; Aparicio del Moral, Beatriz; Appolloni, Matteo; Arena, Claudio; Armstrong, David; Aroca Aliaga, Jose; Asplund, Martin; Audenaert, Jeroen; Auricchio, Natalia; Avelino, Pedro; Baeke, Ann; Baillié, Kevin; Balado, Ana; Ballber Balagueró, Pau; Balestra, Andrea; Ball, Warrick; Ballans, Herve; Ballot, Jerome; Barban, Caroline; Barbary, Gaële; Barbieri, Mauro; Barceló Forteza, Sebastià; Barker, Adrian; Barklem, Paul; Barnes, Sydney; Barrado Navascues, David; Barragan, Oscar; Baruteau, Clément; Basu, Sarbani; Baudin, Frederic; Baumeister, Philipp; Bayliss, Daniel; Bazot, Michael; Beck, Paul G.; Belkacem, Kevin; Bellinger, Earl; Benatti, Serena; Benomar, Othman et al.
Referencia bibliográfica

Experimental Astronomy

Fecha de publicación:
6
2025
Número de autores
846
Número de autores del IAC
16
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
PLATO (PLAnetary Transits and Oscillations of stars) is ESA's M3 mission designed to detect and characterise extrasolar planets and perform asteroseismic monitoring of a large number of stars. PLATO will detect small planets (down to <2REarth) around bright stars (<11 mag), including terrestrial planets in the habitable zone of solar-like stars. With the complement of radial velocity observations from the ground, planets will be characterised for their radius, mass, and age with high accuracy (5%, 10%, 10% for an Earth-Sun combination respectively). PLATO will provide us with a large-scale catalogue of well-characterised small planets up to intermediate orbital periods, relevant for a meaningful comparison to planet formation theories and to better understand planet evolution. It will make possible comparative exoplanetology to place our Solar System planets in a broader context. In parallel, PLATO will study (host) stars using asteroseismology, allowing us to determine the stellar properties with high accuracy, substantially enhancing our knowledge of stellar structure and evolution. The payload instrument consists of 26 cameras with 12cm aperture each. For at least four years, the mission will perform high-precision photometric measurements. Here we review the science objectives, present PLATO's target samples and fields, provide an overview of expected core science performance as well as a description of the instrument and the mission profile towards the end of the serial production of the flight cameras. PLATO is scheduled for a launch date end 2026. This overview therefore provides a summary of the mission to the community in preparation of the upcoming operational phases.