English

The science enabled by a dedicated solar system space telescope

Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics 2020-08-19 v1 Earth and Planetary Astrophysics

Abstract

The National Academy Committee on Astrobiology and Planetary Science (CAPS) made a recommendation to study a large/medium-class dedicated space telescope for planetary science, going beyond the Discovery-class dedicated planetary space telescope endorsed in Visions and Voyages. Such a telescope would observe targets across the entire solar system, engaging a broad spectrum of the science community. It would ensure that the high-resolution, high-sensitivity observations of the solar system in visible and UV wavelengths revolutionized by the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) could be extended. A dedicated telescope for solar system science would: (a) transform our understanding of time-dependent phenomena in our solar system that cannot be studied currently under programs to observe and visit new targets and (b) enable a comprehensive survey and spectral characterization of minor bodies across the solar system, which requires a large time allocation not supported by existing facilities. The time-domain phenomena to be explored are critically reliant on high spatial resolution UV-visible observations. This paper presents science themes and key questions that require a long-lasting space telescope dedicated to planetary science that can capture high-quality, consistent data at the required cadences that are free from effects of the terrestrial atmosphere and differences across observing facilities. Such a telescope would have excellent synergy with astrophysical facilities by placing planetary discoveries made by astrophysics assets in temporal context, as well as triggering detailed follow-up observations using larger telescopes. The telescope would support future missions to the Ice Giants, Ocean Worlds, and minor bodies across the solar system by placing the results of such targeted missions in the context of longer records of temporal activities and larger sample populations.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2008.08069,
  title  = {The science enabled by a dedicated solar system space telescope},
  author = {Cindy L. Young and Michael H. Wong and Kunio M. Sayanagi and Shannon Curry and Kandis L. Jessup and Tracy Becker and Amanda Hendrix and Nancy Chanover and Stephanie Milam and Bryan J. Holler and Gregory Holsclaw and Javier Peralta and John Clarke and John Spencer and Michael S. P. Kelley and Janet Luhmann and David MacDonnell and Ronald J. Vervack and Kurt Retherford and Leigh N. Fletcher and Imke de Pater and Faith Vilas and Lori Feaga and Oswald Siegmund and Jim Bell and Gregory Delory and Joseph Pitman and Thomas Greathouse and Edward Wishnow and Nicholas Schneider and Robert Lillis and Joshua Colwell and Lynn Bowman and Rosaly M. C. Lopes and Melissa McGrath and Franck Marchis and Richard Cartwright and Michael J. Poston},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2008.08069},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

A whitepaper submitted to the Planetary Science Decadal Survey

R2 v1 2026-06-23T17:56:43.626Z