The Earth 2.0 (ET) space mission has entered its phase B study in China. It seeks to understand how frequently habitable Earth-like planets orbit solar-type stars (Earth 2.0s), the formation and evolution of terrestrial-like planets, and the origin of free-floating planets. The final design of ET includes six 28 cm diameter transit telescope systems, each with a field of view of 550 square degrees, and one 35 cm diameter microlensing telescope with a field of view of 4 square degrees. In transit mode, ET will continuously monitor over 2 million FGKM dwarfs in the original Kepler field and its neighboring fields for four years. Simultaneously, in microlensing mode, it will observe over 30 million I < 20.5 stars in the Galactic bulge direction. Simulations indicate that ET mission could identify approximately 40,000 new planets, including about 4,000 terrestrial-like planets across a wide range of orbital periods and in the interstellar space, ~1000 microlensing planets, ~10 Earth 2.0s and around 25 free-floating Earth mass planets. Coordinated observations with ground-based KMTNet telescopes will enable the measurement of masses for ~300 microlensing planets, helping determine the mass distribution functions of free-floating planets and cold planets. ET will operate from the Earth-Sun L2 halo orbit with a designed lifetime exceeding 4 years. The phase B study involves detailed design and engineering development of the transit and microlensing telescopes. Updates on this mission study are reported.
The Earth 2.0 (ET) mission is a Chinese next-generation space mission to detect thousands of Earth-sized terrestrial planets, including habitable Earth-like planets orbiting solar type stars (Earth 2.0s), cold low-mass planets, and freefloating planets. To meet the scientific goals, the ET spacecraft will carry six 30 cm diameter transit telescopes with each field of view of 500 square degrees, and one 35 cm diameter microlensing telescope with a field of view of 4 square degrees, monitor ~1.2M FGKM dwarfs in the original Kepler field and its neighboring fields continuously while monitoring over 30M stars in the Galactic bulge direction. The high precision transit observations require high photometry precision and pointing stability, which is the key drive for the ET spacecraft design. In this paper, details of the overall mission modeling and analysis will be presented. The spacecraft orbit, pointing strategy, stability requirements are presented, as well as the space-ground communication analysis. The ET spacecraft adopts an ultra-high photometry precision & high stable platform, largely inherited from other space science missions. The preliminary design of spacecraft which meets mission requirements is introduced, including the spacecraft overall configuration, observation modes, avionics architecture and development plan, which pays great attention to the pointing stability and huge volume science telemetry download.
An innovative Chinese space mission, the Earth 2.0 (ET) mission, is being developed to combine the transit and microlensing method together to search for Earth-sized exoplanets in the Galaxy, including the most precious ones—Earth 2.0s, i.e., habitable Earth-sized (0.8-1.25 Earth radii) planets orbiting solar type stars, cold and free-floating low-mass planets. ET’s 6 transit telescopes will monitor a FoV of 500 square degrees (covering the Kepler field) continuously for at least four years and generate a huge database containing high-cadence and ultra-high photometry precision light curves of 1.2 million FGKM dwarfs. With such a high value database in hand, many unsolved issues in the exoplanet field and even stellar sciences will be well addressed. Besides looking for Earth 2.0s and constraining its occurrence rate, ET will be dedicated to map a much wider radius-period diagram of terrestrial-like exoplanets than ever and reveal how it depends on the stellar properties and environments. With the 4-yr legacy data of Kepler, ET will observe some planet systems for up to 8 years and catch additional components in a multi-planet system, e.g. cold Giant, cold sub-Earths, exomoons, exorings and even exocomets. Are exomoons and exocomets common in a planet system? What’s the favorite number of planets in a multi-planet system? What’s the most common orbital configuration of planet systems? With these new data, ET will deepen our understandings on how unique our Solar system is and how do multi-planet systems evolve. In addition to exoplanet sciences, ET’s time series data will also benefit the studies in asteroseismology, archeology in the Galaxy, time-domain astrophysics and black hole science.
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