222 research outputs found
On the potential of transit surveys in star clusters: Impact of correlated noise and radial velocity follow-up
We present an extension of the formalism recently proposed by Pepper & Gaudi
to evaluate the yield of transit surveys in homogeneous stellar systems,
incorporating the impact of correlated noise on transit time-scales on the
detectability of transits, and simultaneously incorporating the magnitude
limits imposed by the need for radial velocity follow-up of transit candidates.
New expressions are derived for the different contributions to the noise budget
on transit time-scales and the least-squares detection statistic for box-shaped
transits, and their behaviour as a function of stellar mass is re-examined.
Correlated noise that is constant with apparent stellar magnitude implies a
steep decrease in detection probability at the high mass end which, when
considered jointly with the radial velocity requirements, can severely limit
the potential of otherwise promising surveys in star clusters. However, we find
that small-aperture, wide field surveys may detect hot Neptunes whose radial
velocity signal can be measured with present-day instrumentation in very nearby
(<100 pc) clusters.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Reconstruction of the transit signal in the presence of stellar variability
Intrinsic stellar variability can hinder the detection of shallow transits,
particularly in space-based data. Therefore, this variability has to be
filtered out before running the transit search. Unfortunately, filtering out
the low frequency signal of the stellar variability also modifies the transit
shape. This results in errors in the measured transit depth and duration used
to derive the planet radius, and orbital inclination. We present an evaluation
of the magnitude of this effect based on 20 simulated light curves from the
CoRoT blind exercise 2 (BT2). We then present an iterative filter which uses
the strictly periodic nature of the transits to separate them from other forms
of variability, so as to recover the original transit shape before deriving the
planet parameters. On average with this filter, we improve the estimation of
the transit depth and duration by 15% and 10% respectively.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Accepted for publication in the Proceedings of
IAU Symposium 249: Exoplanet: Detection, Formation and Dynamic
Statistics of Stellar Variability from Kepler - I: Revisiting Quarter 1 with an Astrophysically Robust Systematics Correction
We investigate the variability properties of main sequence stars in the first
month of Kepler data, using a new astrophysically robust systematics
correction, and find that 60% of stars are more variable then the active Sun.
We define low and high variability samples, with a cut corresponding to twice
the variability level of the active Sun, and compare the properties of the
stars belonging to each sample. We show tentative evidence that the more active
stars have lower proper motions and may be located closer to the galactic
plane. We also investigate the frequency content of the variability, finding
clear evidence for periodic or quasi-periodic behaviour in 16% of stars, and
showing that there exist significant differences in the nature of variability
between spectral types. Of the periodic objects, most A and F stars have short
periods (< 2 days) and highly sinusoidal variability, suggestive of pulsations,
whilst G, K and M stars tend to have longer periods (> 5 days, with a trend
towards longer periods at later spectral types) and show a mixture of periodic
and stochastic variability, indicative of activity. Finally, we use
auto-regressive models to characterise the stochastic component of the
variability, and show that its typical amplitude and time-scale both increase
towards later spectral types, which we interpret as a corresponding increase in
the characteristic size and life-time of active regions.Comment: Accepted A&A, 13 pages, 13 figures, 4 table
Stellar Rotation Periods of the Kepler Objects of Interest: A Dearth of Close-in Planets around Fast Rotators
We present a large sample of stellar rotation periods for Kepler Objects of
Interest (KOIs), based on three years of public Kepler data. These were
measured by detecting periodic photometric modulation caused by star spots,
using an algorithm based on the autocorrelation function (ACF) of the light
curve, developed recently by McQuillan, Aigrain & Mazeh (2013). Of the 1919
main-sequence exoplanet hosts analyzed, robust rotation periods were detected
for 737. Comparing the detected stellar periods to the orbital periods of the
innermost planet in each system reveals a notable lack of close-in planets
around rapid rotators. It appears that only slowly spinning stars, with
rotation periods longer than 5-10 days, host planets on orbits shorter than 3
days, although the mechanism(s) that lead(s) to this is not clear.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJL on 8th Aug 2013, 5 pages, 3 figures,
1 table. A full machine-readable version of Table 1 is available as an
ancillary fil
Rotation Periods of 34,030 Kepler Main-Sequence Stars: The Full Autocorrelation Sample
We analyzed 3 years of data from the Kepler space mission to derive rotation
periods of main-sequence stars below 6500 K. Our automated
autocorrelation-based method detected rotation periods between 0.2 and 70 days
for 34,030 (25.6%) of the 133,030 main-sequence Kepler targets (excluding known
eclipsing binaries and Kepler Objects of Interest), making this the largest
sample of stellar rotation periods to date. In this paper we consider the
detailed features of the now well-populated period-temperature distribution and
demonstrate that the period bimodality, first seen by McQuillan, Aigrain &
Mazeh (2013) in the M-dwarf sample, persists to higher masses, becoming less
visible above 0.6 M_sun. We show that these results are globally consistent
with the existing ground-based rotation-period data and find that the upper
envelope of the period distribution is broadly consistent with a
gyrochronological age of 4.5 Gyrs, based on the isochrones of Barnes (2007),
Mamajek & Hillenbrand (2008) and Meibom et al. (2009). We also performed a
detailed comparison of our results to those of Reinhold et al. (2013) and
Nielsen et al. (2013), who have measured rotation periods of field stars
observed by Kepler. We examined the amplitude of periodic variability for the
stars with detected rotation periods, and found a typical range between ~950
ppm (5th percentile) and ~22,700 ppm (95th percentile), with a median of ~5,600
ppm. We found typically higher amplitudes for shorter periods and lower
effective temperatures, with an excess of low-amplitude stars above ~5400 K.Comment: Accepted ApJS 20th Feb 2014, submitted 13th Jan 2014. 15 pages, 12
Figures, 6 Tables. Tables 1 & 2 are available in their entirety in a
machine-readable form in the online supplementary material or from
http://www.astro.tau.ac.il/~amy
Pinning down the mass of Kepler-10c: the importance of sampling and model comparison
Initial RV characterisation of the enigmatic planet Kepler-10c suggested a
mass of M, which was remarkably high for a planet with radius
R; further observations and subsequent analysis hinted at a
(possibly much) lower mass, but masses derived using RVs from two different
spectrographs (HARPS-N and HIRES) were incompatible at a -level. We
demonstrate here how such mass discrepancies may readily arise from sub-optimal
sampling and/or neglecting to model even a single coherent signal (stellar,
planetary, or otherwise) that may be present in RVs. We then present a
plausible resolution of the mass discrepancy, and ultimately characterise
Kepler-10c as having mass M, and mean density
g cm.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
On the potential of transit surveys in star clusters: impact of correlated noise and radial velocity follow-up
We present an extension of the formalism recently proposed by Pepper and Gaudi to evaluate the yield of transit surveys in homogeneous stellar systems, incorporating the impact of correlated noise on transit time-scales on the detectability of transits, and simultaneously incorporating the magnitude limits imposed by the need for radial velocity (RV) follow-up of transit candidates. New expressions are derived for the different contributions to the noise budget on transit time-scales and the least-squares detection statistic for box-shaped transits, and their behaviour as a function of stellar mass is re-examined. Correlated noise that is constant with apparent stellar magnitude implies a steep decrease in detection probability at the high-mass end which, when considered jointly with the RV requirements, can severely limit the potential of otherwise promising surveys in star clusters. However, we find that small-aperture, wide-field surveys may detect hot Neptunes whose RV signal can be measured with present-day instrumentation in very nearby (<100 pc) cluster
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