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Title: | The slicer combined with array of lenslets for exoplanet spectroscopy (SCALES): driving science cases and expected outcomes |
Authors: | Sallum, Steph Skemer, Andrew Stelter, Deno Banyal, R. K Batalha, Natalie Batalha, Natasha Blake, Geoff Brandt, Tim Briesemeister, Zack Kleer, Katherine de Pater, Imke de Desai, Aditi Eisner, Josh Fong, Wen-fai Greene, Tom Honda, Mitsuhiko Jensen-Clem, Rebecca Kain, Isabel Kilpatrick, Charlie Kupke, Renate Lach, Mackenzie Liu, Michael C Macintosh, Bruce Martinez, Raquel A Mawet, Dimitri Miles, Brittany Morley, Caroline Powell, Diana Sethuram, Ramya Sheehan, Patrick Spilker, Justin Stone, Jordan Surya, Arun Sivarani, T Unni, Athira Wagner, Kevin Zhou, Yifan |
Keywords: | SCALES Exoplanets Protoplanets Protoplanetary disks Solar System Integral Field Spectroscopy Keck Observatory |
Issue Date: | Oct-2023 |
Publisher: | SPIE-The International Society for Optical Engineering |
Citation: | Proceedings of the SPIE, Vol. 12680, pp. 1268003-1 - 1268003- 20 |
Abstract: | The Slicer Combined with Array of Lenslets for Exoplanet Spectroscopy (SCALES) is a 2 − 5 µm, high-contrast integral field spectrograph (IFS) currently being built for Keck Observatory. With both low (R ≲ 250) and medium (R ∼ 3500 − 7000) spectral resolution IFS modes, SCALES will detect and characterize significantly colder exoplanets than those accessible with near-infrared (∼ 1 − 2 µm) high-contrast spectrographs. This will lead to new progress in exoplanet atmospheric studies, including detailed characterization of benchmark systems that will advance the state of the art of atmospheric modeling. SCALES’ unique modes, while designed specifically for direct exoplanet characterization, will enable a broader range of novel (exo)planetary observations as well as galactic and extragalactic studies. Here we present the science cases that drive the design of SCALES. We describe an end-to-end instrument simulator that we use to track requirements, and show simulations of expected science yields for each driving science case. We conclude with a discussion of preparations for early science when the instrument sees first light in ∼ 2025. |
Description: | Restricted Access |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8309 |
ISSN: | 0277-786X |
Appears in Collections: | IIAP Publications |
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The slicer combined with array of lenslets for exoplanet spectroscopy (SCALES) driving science cases and expected outcomes.pdf Restricted Access | 2.48 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open Request a copy |
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