Exo-Dat: An Information System in Support of the CoRoT/Exoplanet Science

Deleuil, M.; Meunier, J. C.; Moutou, C.; Surace, C.; Deeg, H. J.; Barbieri, M.; Debosscher, J.; Almenara, J. M.; Agneray, F.; Granet, Y.; Guterman, P.; Hodgkin, S.
Bibliographical reference

The Astronomical Journal, Volume 138, Issue 2, pp. 649-663 (2009).

Advertised on:
8
2009
Number of authors
12
IAC number of authors
2
Citations
99
Refereed citations
89
Description
Exo-Dat is a database and an information system created primarily in support of the exoplanet program of the COnvection ROtation & planetary Transits (CoRoT) mission. In the directions of CoRoT pointings, it provides a united interface to several sets of data: stellar published catalogs, photometric and spectroscopic data obtained during the mission preparation, results from the mission and from follow-up observations, and several mission-specific technical parameters. The new photometric data constitute the subcatalog Exo-Cat, and give consistent 4-color photometry of 14.0 million stars with a completeness to 19th magnitude in the r-filter. It covers several zones in the galactic plane around CoRoT pointings, with a total area of 209 deg2. This Exo-Dat information system provides essential technical support to the ongoing CoRoT light-curve analyses and ground-based follow-up by supplying additional complementary information such as the prior knowledge of the star's fundamental parameters or its contamination level inside the large CoRoT photometric mask. The database is fully interfaced with VO tools and thus benefits from existing visualization and analysis tools like TOPCAT or ALADIN. It is accessible to the CoRoT community through the Web, and will be gradually opened to the public. It is the ideal tool to prepare the foreseen statistical studies of the properties of the exoplanetary systems. As a VO-compliant system, such analyses could thus benefit from the most up-to-date classifier tools. The CoRoT space mission, launched on 2006 December 27, has been developed and is operated by CNES, with the contribution of Austria, Belgium, Brazil, ESA, Germany, and Spain. This project has made use of various observations collected with the Isaac Newton Telescope at La Palma and the GIRAFFE and UVES/FLAMES spectrographs at the VLT/UT2 Kueyen telescope (Paranal observatory, ESO, Chile: program 074.C-0633A, 081.C-0413).
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