Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2021

Presentation information

[E] Oral

P (Space and Planetary Sciences ) » P-AE Astronomy & Extrasolar Bodies

[P-AE16] Exoplanets

Sun. Jun 6, 2021 3:30 PM - 5:00 PM Ch.06 (Zoom Room 06)

convener:Masahiro Ikoma(Division of Science, National Astronomical Observatory of Japan), Norio Narita(The University of Tokyo), Yuka Fujii(National Astronomical Observatory of Japan), Chairperson:Norio Narita(The University of Tokyo)

4:30 PM - 4:45 PM

[PAE16-11] Twinkle: a low-Earth orbit, visible and infrared observatory for exoplanet and solar system spectroscopy

*Billy Edwards1 (1.Blue Skies Space Ltd)

Keywords:Exoplanet atmospheres, Visible and near-infrared spectroscopy, Space-based telescope

The Twinkle Space Mission is a space-based observatory that has been conceived to measure the atmospheric composition of exoplanets as well as characterising stars and solar system objects. The satellite is based on a high-heritage platform and will carry a 0.45 m telescope with a visible and infrared spectrograph providing simultaneous wavelength coverage from 0.5 - 4.5 μm. The spacecraft will be launched into a Sun-synchronous low-Earth polar orbit and will operate in this highly stable thermal environment for a baseline lifetime of seven years.

Twinkle will have the capability to provide high-quality infrared spectroscopic characterisation of the atmospheres of hundreds of bright exoplanets, covering a wide range of planetary types. It will also be capable of providing phase curves for hot, short-period planets around bright stars targets and of providing ultra-precise photometric light curves to accurately constrain orbital parameters, including ephemerides and TTVs/TDVs present in multi-planet systems.

Twinkle is available for researchers around the globe in two ways:

1) joining its collaborative multi-year survey programme, which will observe hundreds of exoplanets and solar system objects; and
2) accessing dedicated telescope time on the spacecraft, which they can schedule for any combination of science cases.

I will present an overview of Twinkle’s capabilities and discuss some example exoplanet surveys to highlight the broad range of targets the mission could observe, demonstrating the huge scientific potential of the spacecraft.