Bibcode
Hidalgo, D.; Alonso, R.; Pallé, E.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 621, id.A44, 10 pp.
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1
2019
Journal
Citations
3
Refereed citations
2
Description
Phase curves, or the change in observed illumination of the planet as it
orbits around its host star, help us to characterize their atmospheres.
However, the variability of the host star can make their detection
challenging. The presence of starspots, faculae, flares, and rotational
effects introduce brightness variations that can hide other flux
variations related to the presence of an exoplanet: ellipsoidal
variation, Doppler boosting, and a combination of reflected light and
thermal emission from the planet. Here we present a study to quantify
the effect of stellar variability on the detectability of phase curves
in the optical. In the first stage we simulated ideal data, with
different white noise levels, and with cadences and total duration
matching a quarter of the Kepler mission. We performed injection and
recovery tests to evaluate the minimum number of planetary orbits that
need to be observed in order to determine the amplitude of the phase
curve with an accuracy of 15%. We also evaluate the effect of a
simplistic stellar variability signal with low amplitude in order to
provide strong constraints on the minimum number of orbits needed under
these ideal conditions. In the second stage we applied these methods to
data from Q9 of the Kepler mission, known for its low instrumental
noise. The injection and recovery tests are performed on a selected
sample of the less noisy stars in different effective temperature
ranges. Even for the shortest explored planet period of 1 day, we find
that observing a single orbit of the planet fails to detect accurately
more than 90% of the inserted amplitude. The best recovery rates, close
to 48%, are obtained after 10 orbits of a 1 day period planet with the
largest explored amplitude of 150 ppm. The temperature range of the host
stars providing better recovery ratios is 5500 K < Teff
< 6000 K. Our results provide guidelines to selecting the best
targets in which phase curves can be measured to the greatest accuracy,
given the variability and effective temperature of its host star, which
is of interest for the upcoming TESS, CHEOPS, and PLATO space missions.
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