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Twinkle - A mission to unravel the story of planets in our Galaxy

  • Marcell Tessenyi
  • , Giovanna Tinetti
  • , Jonathan Tennyson
  • , Giorgio Savini
  • , Enzo Pascale
  • , Susan Jason
  • , Alex Da Silva Curiel
  • , James Williams
  • , Gavin Johnson
  • , Simon Prasad
  • , Amar Vora
  • , Chris Saunders
  • , Jonathan Friend
  • UCL University College London
  • Cardiff Law School
  • Tycho House

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference paperpeer-review

Abstract

The study of exoplanets has been incredibly successful over the past 20 years: nearly 2000 planets have been discovered, and along these discoveries fundamental parameters such as mass, radius and semimajor axis have been obtained. In the past decade, pioneering results have been obtained using transit spectroscopy with Hubble, Spitzer and ground-based facilities, which have enabled the detection of a few of the most abundant chemical species, the presence of clouds, and also permitted the study of the planetary thermal structure. To follow these early successes, we are building Twinkle: a Made-in-UK, small dedicated satellite designed to understand these newly found worlds through the measurement of their atmospheric composition. Twinkle will be built quickly and cheaply (£50M including launch) by taking advantage of lowered costs of access to space to deliver ground breaking scientific results. The Twinkle satellite will be built in the UK and launched into a low-Earth orbit within 3 years, using an existing platform designed by Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd and instrumentation built by a consortium of UK institutes. The funding for Twinkle will be provided through a mixture of private and public sources. Twinkle will analyse at least 100 exoplanets in the Milky Way. Its infrared spectrograph will enable observations of a wide range of planet types including super-Earths (rocky planets 1-10 times the mass of Earth) and hot-Jupiters (gas giants orbiting very close to their suns). Some of the target planets are orbiting stars similar to our Sun and some are orbiting cooler red-dwarfs. For the largest planets orbiting bright stars, Twinkle will even be able to produce maps of clouds and temperature. The Twinkle instrument will be composed of a visible-IR spectrograph (between 0.5 and 5μm) with resolving power R∼200, and will orbit Earth on a sun-synchronous polar orbit. In this paper we report on the mission progress and updates on the technical design following the successful completion of the payload study.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings of the International Astronautical Congress, IAC
Volume0
Publication statusPublished - 2016
Event67th International Astronautical Congress, IAC 2016 - Guadalajara, Mexico
Duration: 26 Sept 201630 Sept 2016

Publication series

NameProceedings of the International Astronautical Congress, IAC
PublisherInternational Astronautical Federation, IAF
ISSN (Print)0074-1795

Conference

Conference67th International Astronautical Congress, IAC 2016
Country/TerritoryMexico
CityGuadalajara
Period26/09/201630/09/2016

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