Author
Monnier, John D.Ireland, Michael
Kraus, Stefan
Alonso-Herrero, Almudena
Bonsor, Amy
Baron, Fabien
Bayo, Amelia
Berger, Jean-Philippe
Boyajian, Tabetha
Chiavassa, Andrea
Ciardi, David
Creech-Eakman, Michelle
de Wit, Willem-Jan
Defrère, Denis
Dong, Ruobing
Duchêne, Gaspard
Espaillat, Catherine
Gallenne, Alexandre
Gandhi, Poshak
Gonzalez, Jean-Francois
Haniff, Chris
Hoenig, Sebastian
Ilee, John
Isella, Andrea
Jensen, Eric
Juhasz, Attila
Kane, Stephen
Kishimoto, Makoto
Kley, Wilhelm
Kral, Quentin
Kratter, Kaitlin
Labadie, Lucas
Lacour, Sylvestre
Laughlin, Greg
Le Bouquin, Jean-Baptiste
Michael, Ernest
Meru, Farzana
Millan-Gabet, Rafael
Millour, Florentin
Minardi, Stefano
Morbidelli, Alessandro
Mordasini, Chris
Morlok, Andreas
Mozurkewich, Dave
Nelson, Richard
Olofsson, Johan
Oudmaijer, Rene
Packham, Chris
Paladini, Claudia
Panic, Olja
Petrov, Romain
Pope, Benjamin
Pott, Joerg-Uwe
Quiroga-Nunez, Luis Henry
Ramos Almeida, Cristina
Raymond, Sean N.
Regaly, Zsolt
Reynolds, Mark
Ridgway, Stephen
Rinehart, Stephen
Schreiber, Matthias
Smith, Michael
Stassun, Keivan
Surdej, Jean
ten Brummelaar, Theo
Tristram, Konrad
Turner, Neal
Tuthill, Peter
van Belle, Gerard
Vasisht, Gautum
Wallace, Alexander
Weigelt, Gerd
Wishnow, Edward
Wittkowski, Markus
Wolf, Sebastian
Young, John
Zhao, Ming
Zhu, Zhaohuan
Zúñiga-Fernández, Sebastian
Affiliation
Univ ArizonaIssue Date
2018-07-09
Metadata
Show full item recordPublisher
SPIE-INT SOC OPTICAL ENGINEERINGCitation
Monnier, J. D., Ireland, M., Kraus, S., Alonso-Herrero, A., Bonsor, A., Baron, F., ... & Zúñiga-Fernández, S. (2018, July). Planet formation imager: project update. In Optical and Infrared Interferometry and Imaging VI (Vol. 10701, p. 1070118). International Society for Optics and Photonics.Rights
© 2018 SPIE.Collection Information
This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu.Abstract
The Planet Formation Imager (PFI) is a near- and mid-infrared interferometer project with the driving science goal of imaging directly the key stages of planet formation, including the young proto-planets themselves. Here, we will present an update on the work of the Science Working Group (SWG), including new simulations of dust structures during the assembly phase of planet formation and quantitative detection efficiencies for accreting and non-accreting young exoplanets as a function of mass and age. We use these results to motivate two reference PFI designs consisting of a) twelve 3m telescopes with a maximum baseline of 1.2 km focused on young exoplanet imaging and b) twelve 8 m telescopes optimized for a wider range of young exoplanets and protoplanetary disk imaging out to the 150 K H2O ice line. Armed with 4 x 8 m telescopes, the ESO/VLTI can already detect young exoplanets in principle and projects such as MATISSE, Hi-5 and Heimdallr are important PFI pathfinders to make this possible. We also discuss the state of technology development needed to make PFI more affordable, including progress towards new designs for inexpensive, small field-of-view, large aperture telescopes and prospects for Cubesat-based space interferometry.ISSN
0277-786XVersion
Final published versionae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1117/12.2312683