118 research outputs found
Joint Modeling of Radial Velocities and Photometry with a Gaussian Process Framework
Developments in the stability of modern spectrographs have led to extremely
precise instrumental radial velocity (RV) measurements. For most stars, the
detection limit of planetary companions with these instruments is expected to
be dominated by astrophysical noise sources such as starspots. Correlated
signals caused by rotationally-modulated starspots can obscure or mimic the
Doppler shifts induced by even the closest, most massive planets. This is
especially true for young, magnetically active stars where stellar activity can
cause fluctuation amplitudes of 0.1 mag in brightness and 100
m s in RV semi-amplitudes. Techniques that can mitigate these effects
and increase our sensitivity to young planets are critical to improving our
understanding of the evolution of planetary systems. Gaussian processes (GPs)
have been successfully employed to model and constrain activity signals in
individual cases. However, a principled approach of this technique,
specifically for the joint modeling of photometry and RVs, has not yet been
developed. In this work, we present a GP framework to simultaneously model
stellar activity signals in photometry and RVs that can be used to investigate
the relationship between both time series. Our method, inspired by the
framework of (Aigrain et al. 2012), models spot-driven
activity signals as the linear combinations of two independent latent GPs and
their time derivatives. We also simulate time series affected by starspots by
extending the software (Luger et al. 2019) to incorporate
time evolution of stellar features. Using these synthetic datasets, we show
that our method can predict spot-driven RV variations with greater accuracy
than other GP approaches.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figure
Stellar Systems at Low Radio Frequencies:The Discovery of Radio Exoplanets
For more than thirty years, radio astronomers have searched for auroral emission from exoplanets. With LOFAR we have recently detected strong, highly circularly polarised low-frequency (144 MHz) radio emission associated with a M-dwarf — the expected signpost of such radiation. The star itself is quiescent, with a 130-day rotation period and low X-ray luminosity. In this talk, I will detail how the radio properties of the detection imply that such emission is generated by the presence of an exoplanet in a short period orbit around the star, and our follow-up radial-velocity (RV) observations with Harps-N to confirm the exoplanet's presence. Our study highlights the powerful new and developing synergy between low-frequency radio astronomy and RV observations, with radio emission providing a strong prior on the presence of a short-period planet. I will conclude the talk detailing how the radio detection of an star-exoplanet interaction provides unique information for exoplanet climate and habitability studies, and the extension of our survey to other stellar systems
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