The Atmospheric Remote-Sensing Infrared Exoplanet Large-survey, ARIEL, has been selected to be the next (M4) medium class space mission in the ESA Cosmic Vision programme. From launch in 2028, and during the following 4 years of operation, ARIEL will perform precise spectroscopy of the atmospheres of ~1000 known transiting exoplanets using its metre-class telescope. A three-band photometer and three spectrometers cover the 0.5 µm to 7.8 µm region of the electromagnetic spectrum.
This paper gives an overview of the mission payload, including the telescope assembly, the FGS (Fine Guidance System) - which provides both pointing information to the spacecraft and scientific photometry and low-resolution spectrometer data, the ARIEL InfraRed Spectrometer (AIRS), and other payload infrastructure such as the warm electronics, structures and cryogenic cooling systems.
Ariel, the “atmospheric remote sensing infrared exoplanet large survey” mission, is the European Space Agency’s Cosmic Vision M4 (medium-class number 4) science mission. It has recently gone through an implementation approval (“adoption”), with a planned launch in 2029. Ariel, together with two other M4 candidate missions (THOR and XIPE), was recommended in June 2015 to enter an assessment study, consisting of a Phase 0 at the ESA internal Concurrent Design Facility study followed by a Phase A with parallel industrial studies. The Phase A was concluded in March 2018 with the selection of Ariel as the M4 mission endorsed by the ESA Science Programme Committee (SPC). Phase B1 was subsequently initiated, and was concluded by the Mission Adoption Review in mid-2020, followed by the formal adoption of Ariel in November 2020 by the SPC. Ariel is a survey-type mission dedicated to the characterisation of exoplanets by performing a chemical census. Using the differential technique of transit/eclipse spectroscopic observations, Ariel will obtain transmission and/or emission spectra of the atmospheres of a large (~1000) and diverse sample of known exoplanets covering a wide range of masses, densities, equilibrium temperatures, orbital properties and host-star characteristics. This will include hot Jupiters to warm Super-Earths, orbiting A to M spectral class host stars. This paper reports on the Ariel Phase 0/A/B1 study, including the conclusions of the reviews that were conducted in 2020 to close the study and support the adoption process.
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