The ESCAPE mission overview: Exploring the stellar drivers of exoplanet habitability
Author
France, K.
Fleming, B.
Youngblood, A.
Mason, J.
Drake, J.J.
Amerstorfer, U.
Barstow, M.
Bourrier, V.
Champey, P.
Fossati, L.
Froning, C.
Green, J.C.
Grise, F.
Gronoff, G.
Hellickson, T.
Jin, M.
Koskinen, T.T.
Kowalski, A.F.
Kruczek, N.
Linsky, J.L.
Lipscy, S.J.
McEntaffer, R.L.
Miles, D.M.
Patton, T.
Savage, S.L.
Siegmund, O.
Spittler, C.
Unruh, B.
Volz, M.
Affiliation
Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, University of ArizonaIssue Date
2021
Metadata
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SPIECitation
France, K., Fleming, B., Youngblood, A., Mason, J., Drake, J. J., Amerstorfer, U., Barstow, M., Bourrier, V., Champey, P., Fossati, L., Froning, C., Green, J. C., Grise, F., Gronoff, G., Hellickson, T., Jin, M., Koskinen, T. T., Kowalski, A. F., Kruczek, N., … Volz, M. (2021). The ESCAPE mission overview: Exploring the stellar drivers of exoplanet habitability. Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering.Rights
Copyright © 2021 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 Extreme-ultraviolet Stellar Characterization for Atmospheric Physics and Evolution (ESCAPE) mission is an astrophysics Small Explorer employing ultraviolet spectroscopy (EUV: 80-825 Å and FUV: 1280-1650 Å) to explore the high-energy radiation environment in the habitable zones around nearby stars. ESCAPE provides the first comprehensive study of the stellar EUV and coronal mass ejection environments which directly impact the habitability of rocky exoplanets. In a 20 month science mission, ESCAPE will provide the essential stellar characterization to identify exoplanetary systems most conducive to habitability and provide a roadmap for NASAs future life-finder missions. ESCAPE accomplishes this goal with roughly two-order-of-magnitude gains in EUV efficiency over previous missions. ESCAPE employs a grazing incidence telescope that feeds an EUV and FUV spectrograph. The ESCAPE science instrument builds on previous ultraviolet and X-ray instrumentation, grazing incidence optical systems, and photon-counting ultraviolet detectors used on NASA astrophysics, heliophysics, and planetary science missions. The ESCAPE spacecraft bus is the versatile and high-heritage Ball Aerospace BCP-Small spacecraft. Data archives will be housed at the Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes (MAST). ESCAPE is currently completing a NASA Phase A study, and if selected for Phase B development would launch in 2025. © COPYRIGHT SPIE. Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.Note
Immediate accessISSN
0277-786XISBN
9781510644809Version
Final published versionae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1117/12.2593814