Pale Blue Dot Explorer: A Case for Adding Earth to the Planetary Sciences List of Targets (STK-determined cis-lunar orbit for a Pale Blue Dot Explorer) Co-authors: Sanjoy M. Som Tyler D. Robinson Andres Dono Perez Blue Marble Space, Department of Astronomy Millennium Engineering, Exobiology Branch & Planetary Sciences Space & Mission Solutions NASA Ames Res. Center Northern Arizona University NASA Ames Res. Center
[email protected] [email protected] [email protected] +1 650 604 1483 +1 928 523 0350 +1 650 604 2025 Co-signees: (NASA GSFC), (UC Riverside), (UC Giada Arney Edward Schwieterman Stephen R. Kane Riverside), (Blue Marble Space Institute of Science), Jacob Haqq-Misra Chuanfei Dong (Princeton University), (UC Berkeley), (UC Riverside), Julia DeMarines Kimberly Bott Ravi (NASA GSFC), (Oxford), (University of Colorado), Kopparapu Sarah Rugheimer Eric T. Wolf (Blue Marble Space Institute of Science), (Penn State), Graham Lau Evan L. Sneed Ivan G. (Blue Marble Space Institute of Science) (NCSU) Paulino-Lima Julian M. Chesnutt Omer (Origins Center ; University of Groningen; BMSIS), (University Markovitch Shiladitya DasSarma of Maryland School of Medicine, BMSIS), (Georgia Institute of Christopher T. Reinhard Technology), (NASA Ames Research Center; Blue Marble Space Institute of Jennifer G. Blank Science), (Montana State University), (Montana Christine M. Foreman Roland Hatzenpichler State University), (Blue Marble Space Institute of Science, NASA Ames Research Milena Popovic Center), (NASA ARC), (Amity University Mumbai, India), R. Craig Everroad Siddharth Pandey (NASA ARC) Natasha Batalha Abstract Obtaining observational data to inform the science of future missions focused on Earth-like exoplanets is of prime importance for NASA Planetary Science and Astrobiology.