Large Interferometer For Exoplanets (LIFE) : XIV. Finding terrestrial protoplanets in the galactic neighborhood
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Author
LIFE
Cesario, Lorenzo
Lichtenberg, Tim
Alei, Eleonora
Carrión-González, Óscar
Dannert, Felix A.
Defrère, Denis
Ertel, Steve
Fortier, Andrea
Muñoz, A. García
Glauser, Adrian M.
Hansen, Jonah T.
Helled, Ravit
Huber, Philipp A.
Ireland, Michael J.
Kammerer, Jens
Laugier, Romain
Lillo-Box, Jorge
Menti, Franziska
Meyer, Michael R.
Noack, Lena
Quanz, Sascha P.
Quirrenbach, Andreas
Rugheimer, Sarah
van der Tak, Floris
Wang, Haiyang S.
Anger, Marius
Balsalobre-Ruza, Olga
Bhattarai, Surendra
Braam, Marrick
Castro-González, Amadeo
Cockell, Charles S.
Constantinou, Tereza
Cugno, Gabriele
Davoult, Jeanne
Güdel, Manuel
Hernitschek, Nina
Hinkley, Sasha
Itoh, Satoshi
Janson, Markus
Johansen, Anders
Jones, Hugh R. A.
van Kempen, Tim A.
Kislyakova, Kristina G.
Korth, Judith
Kovacevic, Andjelka B.
Kraus, Stefan
Kuiper, Rolf
Mathew, Joice
Matsuo, Taro
Miguel, Yamila
Attention
2299/28580
Abstract
The increased brightness temperature of young rocky protoplanets during their magma ocean epoch makes them potentially amenable to atmospheric characterization to distances from the solar system far greater than thermally equilibrated terrestrial exoplanets, offering observational opportunities for unique insights into the origin of secondary atmospheres and the near surface conditions of prebiotic environments. The Large Interferometer For Exoplanets (LIFE) mission will employ a space-based mid-infrared nulling interferometer to directly measure the thermal emission of terrestrial exoplanets. Here, we seek to assess the capabilities of various instrumental design choices of the LIFE mission concept for the detection of cooling protoplanets with transient high-temperature magma ocean atmospheres, in young stellar associations in particular. Using the LIFE mission instrument simulator (LIFEsim) we assess how specific instrumental parameters and design choices, such as wavelength coverage, aperture diameter, and photon throughput, facilitate or disadvantage the detection of protoplanets. We focus on the observational sensitivities of distance to the observed planetary system, protoplanet brightness temperature using a blackbody assumption, and orbital distance of the potential protoplanets around both G- and M-dwarf stars. Our simulations suggest that LIFE will be able to detect (S/N $\geq$ 7) hot protoplanets in young stellar associations up to distances of $\approx$100 pc from the solar system for reasonable integration times (up to $\sim$hours). Detection of an Earth-sized protoplanet orbiting a solar-sized host star at 1 AU requires less than 30 minutes of integration time. M-dwarfs generally need shorter integration times. The contribution from wavelength regions $