Download - Life in the Milky Way: Panel Discussion

Transcript
Page 1: Life in the Milky Way: Panel Discussion

Life in the Milky Way:Panel Discussion

Wesley A. TraubChief Scientist, NASA’s Exoplanet Exploration Program

Jet Propulsion Laboratory,California Institute of Technology

Ozma 50 Workshop, Green Bank, West Virginia

13 Sept. 2010

Page 2: Life in the Milky Way: Panel Discussion

Our Big Questions for Exoplanets• What kind of signs of life should we be looking for? • Where and how should we look?• What is our strategy for finding signs of life beyond the Solar System?

2Traub

Page 3: Life in the Milky Way: Panel Discussion

Three Direct Images To Date

3Traub

Ref.: Fomalhaut, Kalas et al., 2009HR8799, Marois et al., 2009 also Serabyn & Mawet 2010Beta Pic, Lagrange et al., 2010

Page 4: Life in the Milky Way: Panel Discussion

Exoplanet prospects, near and far

Kepler transits/seismology 500 to 2000 pc distant

156,000 stars14 to 16 mag0.24% of sky

Expect 400 Earths (1/star)

CoRoT transits/seismology 400 to 2000 pc distant

~40,000 stars13 to 15 mag0.01% of sky

SIM Lite astrometry 5 to 25 pc distant~70 to 2100 stars

3 to 7 mag100% of sky

Expect 70 Earths (1/star)

+TPF-C/O/I direct imaging

Color & spectrum all planetsSigns of life

PLATO transits/seismology 100-400 pc distant

250,000 stars10 to 13 mag

8% of skyExpect 400 Earths (1/star)

WFIRST gravitational microlensing 1000 to 10,000 pc distant

Page 5: Life in the Milky Way: Panel Discussion

Prospects for finding and characterizing exoplanets

• Current missions: CoRoT and Kepler for transits

- Telling us frequency of terrestrial planets, from close-in to habitable zones

• Also: Spitzer (warm) and HST

- Giving us transit visible and infrared spectra of giant planets

• Planned missions: JWST

- Possible transit spectra of super-Earth planets

• Recommended mission: WFIRST for exoplanets (and dark energy)

- Gravitational lensing gives mass and snapshot of orbit

• Future possibility: Exoplanet mission

- To be decided around mid-decade, and launched in 2020s,

could be coronagraph imager for exoplanet discovery and characterization

5Traub