Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2022

Presentation information

[J] Oral

U (Union ) » Union

[U-08] Large-scale Projects in Earth and Planetary Science

Mon. May 23, 2022 1:45 PM - 3:15 PM Exhibition Hall Special Setting (2) (Exhibition Hall 8, Makuhari Messe)

convener:Takuji Nakamura(National Institute of Polar Research), convener:Eiichi Tajika(Department of Earth and Planetary Science, Graduate School of Science, The University of Tokyo), Kenji Satake(Earthquake Research Institute, University of Tokyo), convener:Yukihiro Takahashi(Department of Cosmosciences, Graduate School of Science, Hokkaido University), Chairperson:Kenji Satake(Earthquake Research Institute, University of Tokyo)

2:53 PM - 3:15 PM

[U08-11] LAPYUTA(Life-environmentology, Astronomy, and PlanetarY Ultraviolet Telescope Assembly) mission

*Fuminori Tsuchiya1, Go Murakami2, Atsushi Yamazaki2, Tomoki Kimura3, Masato Kagitani1, Ryoichi Koga5, Jun Kimura6, Norio Narita4, Shingo Kameda7, Masahiro Ikoma8, Masami Ouchi8,4, Masaomi Tanaka4, Kei Masunaga2, Shotaro Sakai1, Chihiro Tao9, Masaki Kuwabara7, Shin Toriumi2 (1.Tohoku University, 2.ISAS/JAXA, 3.Tokyo University of Science, 4.The University of Tokyo, 5.Nagoya University, 6.Osaka University, 7.Rikkyo University, 8.NAOJ, 9.NICT)

Ultraviolet observation technique is one of the most powerful tools to cover wide science fields, from planetary science to astronomy. Here we propose a UV space telescope, LAPYUTA (Life-environmentology, Astronomy, and PlanetarY Ultraviolet Telescope Assembly), as a Japanese-leading mission, by using both many heritages of UV instruments for planetary science (e.g., Hisaki) and space telescope techniques for astronomy. We will accomplish the following four goals: (1) dynamics of our solar system planets and moons as the most quantifiable archetypes of extraterrestrial habitable environments in the universe, (2) transit spectroscopy of exoplanetary atmosphere, especially hydrogen and oxygen exospheres, to observe on-going atmospheric escaping predicted to occur on Earth-like exoplanets in the habitable zone of low temperature star system, (3) the unique UV map of the gaseous large-scale structures (LSSs) to test the structure formation scenario of the Λ cold dark matter (CDM) model and to unveil galaxy growth and feedback processes in the LSSs, and (4) the time-domain survey for transient sky in the UV wavelength to witness the first moments of high-energy events such as compact-object mergers and supernovae with a great synergy of the growing facilities of multi-messenger astronomy including gravitational-wave observatories.