Abstract

Abstract We present modeled detection limits of the Gemini Planet Imager (GPI) and the Wide-Field Infrared Space Telescope (WFIRST) to an optical and infrared laser which could be used by an extraterrestrial civilization to signal their presence. GPI and WFIRST could utilize a coronagraph to search for extraterrestrial intelligence in the present and future. We use archival data for GPI stars and simulated WFIRST observations to find the detectable flux ratio of a laser signal to residual scattered starlight around the target star. This flux ratio is then converted to detectable power as a function of distance from the parent star. For GPI, we assume a monochromatic laser wavelength of 1.55 μm and a wavelength of 575 nm for WFIRST. We assume that the lasers are projected through a 10 m aperture, and that the intensity of the laser beam follows a Gaussian profile. Our analysis is performed on six stars with spectral types later than F within 20 pc (with an emphasis on solar analogs at different distances). The most notable result is the detection limit for τ Ceti, a G5V star with four known exoplanets, two of those within the habitable zone (HZ). The result shows that a 24 kW laser is detectable from τ Ceti from outside of the HZ with GPI and a 7.3 W laser is detectable from within τ Ceti’s HZ by WFIRST.

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