Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published December 15, 2020 | Published
Book Section - Chapter Open

The Roman exoplanet Imaging data challenge: a major community engagement effort

Abstract

Organized by the Turnbull Science Investigation Team (SIT), the 2019-2020 Roman Exoplanet Imaging Data Challenge (EIDC) launched in mid October 2019 and ran for eight months. This data challenge was a unique opportunity for exoplanet scientists of all backgrounds and experience levels to get acquainted with realistic Roman CGI (coronagraphic) simulated data with a new contrast regimes at 10-8 to 10-9 enabling to unveil planets down to the Neptune-mass in reflected light. Participating teams had to recover the astrometry of an exoplanetary system combining precursor radial velocity data (also simulated across 15 years) with two to six coronagraphic imaging epochs (HLC and Star Shade). They had to perform accurate orbital fitting and determine the mass of any planet hidden in the data. It involved PSF subtraction techniques, post-processing and other astrophysics hurdles to overcome such as contamination sources (stellar, extragalactic and exozodiacal light). We organized four tutorial "hack-a-thon" events to get as many people on-board. The EIDC proved to be an excellent way to engage with the intricacies of the first mission to perform wavefront control in space, as a pathfinder to future flagship missions. It also generated a lot of positive interactions between open source package owners and a whole new set of young exoplanet scientists running them. As a community we are a few steps closer to being ready to analyze real CGI data!

Additional Information

© 2020 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). This work was funded by NASA Grant NNG16PJ27C, which supports the Turnbull Roman CGI SIT. We thank the Hayden Planetarium and Jackie Faherty for an excellent tour of known exoplanet host stars, and the Flatiron Institute for hosting the New York City hack-a-thon event. We thank STScI, IPAC, and Motohide Tamura and Masayuki Kuzuhara (University of Tokyo & Astrobiology Center) for hosting hack-a-thons in Baltimore, Pasadena, and Tokyo. We thank John Krist and the JPL project science team for the OS6 simulations, and we thank Sarah Blunt and BJ Fulton for their ongoing work on orbitize! and RadVel. Finally, we thank all of the tutorial and/or challenge participants for joining us in this community effort. We also thank the SPIE Organizing Committee and the Proceedings Coordinators.

Attached Files

Published - 1144337.pdf

Published - SPIE-AS20-586c2d35-9205-ea11-813b-005056be78dc.pdf

Files

1144337.pdf
Files (8.1 MB)
Name Size Download all
md5:c47d740de149c0344b937c51dc2c0f82
6.2 MB Preview Download
md5:b5a513f9d0368e2a6d329095dc6cbbdd
1.9 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
January 15, 2024