Monday, March 12, 2018

Day 1380

Monday.  Tuesday.


1803.04319
Recognizing the value of the Solar gravitational lens for direct multipixel imaging and spectroscopy of an Exoplanet
Turyshev, et al

The Solar Gravitational Lens (SGL) allows for major brightness amplification (~1e11 at wavelength of 1 um) and extreme angular resolution (~1e-10 arcsec) within a narrow field of view.  A meter-class telescope, with a modest coronagraph to back solar light with 1e-6 suppression placed in the focal area of the SGL, can image an exoplanet at a distance of 30 parsec with few kilometer-scale resolution on its surface.  Notably, spectroscopic broadband SNR is ~1e-6 in two weeks of integration time, providing this instrument with incredible remote sensing capabilities.  A mission capable of exploiting the remarkable optical properties of the SGL allows for direct high-resolution imaging/spectroscopy of a potentially habitable exoplanet.  Such missions could allow exploration of exoplanets relying on the SGL capabilities decades, if not centuries, earlier than possible with other extant technologies.

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