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Nautilus Space Observatory: The Evolution of Planets and their Atmospheres

Published 24 Jun 2026 in astro-ph.IM and astro-ph.EP | (2606.26214v1)

Abstract: We are just beginning to explore the billion-year evolution from nascent planets in disks to mature planetary systems. Recent discoveries hint at demographic and atmospheric differences between young planets and their Gyr-old counterparts, but current facilities are limited - particularly in their ability to conduct statistical atmospheric studies over a broad period range. This white paper outlines compelling science achievable with the Nautilus Space Observatory, a proposed constellation of large-diameter space telescopes. We identify four primary scientific objectives: (1) determining the timescales over which planets evolve into sub-Neptunes and super-Earths; (2) tracking the temporal evolution of atmospheric mass-loss rates; (3) characterizing the evolution of the atmospheric mean molecular weight and C/O ratio; and (4) identifying the emergence of Helium-dominated worlds. Answering these questions requires the high spatial resolution, broad-wavelength coverage, large effective area, and parallelized multiple units that Nautilus provides. By isolating the physical processes that govern the evolution of planets and their atmospheres, these science objectives directly support NASA's Cosmic Origins and Exoplanet Exploration Programs.

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