We searched for extrasolar planets around pulsating stars by examining
Kepler data for transit-like events hidden in the intrinsic
variability. All Short Cadence observations for targets with 6000 K <Teff< 8500 K were visually inspected for transit-like events following the
removal of pulsational signals by sinusoidal fits. Clear transit-like events
were detected in KIC 5613330 and KIC 8197761. KIC 5613330 is a confirmed
exoplanet host (Kepler-635b), where the transit period determined here is
consistent with the literature value. KIC 8197761 is a γ Doradus -
δ Scuti star exhibiting eclipses/transits occurring every 9.8686667(27)
d, having durations of 8.37 h, and causing brightness drops FΔF=0.00629(29). The star's pulsation spectrum contains several mode doublets
and triplets, identified as l=1, with a mean spacing of 0.001659(15) c/d,
implying an internal rotation period of 301±3 d. Trials to calculate the
size of the light travel time effect (LTTE) from the pulsations to constrain
the companion's mass ended inconclusive. Finding planets around γ
Doradus stars from the pulsational LTTE, therefore, is concluded to be
unrealistic. Spectroscopic monitoring of KIC 8197761 revealed sinusoidal radial
velocity variations with a semi-amplitude of 19.75±0.32 km/s, while
individual spectra present rotational broadening consistent with vsini=9±1 km/s. This suggests that the stellar surface rotation is synchronized
with the orbit, whereas the stellar core rotates ∼30 times slower.
Combining the observed radial velocity variability with the transit photometry,
constrains the companion's mass to be ≈0.28 M⊙, ruling out an
exoplanet hypothesis.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA