White dwarf planetary systems in the ultraviolet
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Almost every known planet host will evolve into a white dwarf, and the surviving planetary material will continue to orbit this stellar remnant. Asteroids perturbed onto star-grazing orbits will become disrupted, forming an accretion disk which causes "enrichment" of the otherwise pure hydrogen or helium atmosphere. Measurements of these photospheric abundances give detailed insights into the interior compositions of exo-planetesimals with an accuracy not possible for intact exoplanets around main sequence stars. This method has revealed the diversity of rocky material in our solar neighborhood, including primitive, chondritic planetesimals, fragments of planetary cores, and even analogues of Kuiper belt objects. The planetesimal abundances can be used as an input to interior structure models. The far-ultraviolet is a key wavelength range for this field because it contains strong transitions for almost every element of interest, many of which are undetectable using ground-based optical spectroscopy. Without the FUV, we will no longer have access to the C, N, P, S content of exoplanetary bodies and thus will no longer be able to probe how volatiles interact with refractories, which is crucial to understanding planet formation-and even the origin of life. The medium resolution and high sensitivity of COS on HST has been indispensable in determining the compositions of dozens of exo-planetesimals. However, the only two medium resolution FUV-capable spectrographs are currently onboard HST, with no plans for replacements until the 2040s. An extension to the HST mission is critical for the field of white dwarf planetary systems, because the loss of FUV capability would leave us blind to volatiles. Boosting the orbit of HST would allow us to measure volatile abundances, determine the rocky planetary occurrence rate, investigate differentiation, and probe for photospheric abundance variability.
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