Bibcode
Tingley, B.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, v.403, p.329-337 (2003)
Fecha de publicación:
5
2003
Revista
Número de citas
23
Número de citas referidas
21
Descripción
The idea of finding extrasolar planets (ESPs) through observations of
drops in stellar brightness due to transiting objects has been around
for decades. It has only been in the last ten years, however, that any
serious attempts to find ESPs became practical. The discovery of a
transiting planet around the star HD 209458 (Charbonneau et al.
cite{charbonneau}) has led to a veritable explosion of research,
because the photometric method is the only way to search a large number
of stars for ESPs simultaneously with current technology. To this point,
however, there has been limited research into the various techniques
used to extract the subtle transit signals from noise, mainly brief
summaries in various papers focused on publishing transit-like
signatures in observations. The scheduled launches over the next few
years of satellites whose primary or secondary science missions will be
ESP discovery motivates a review and a comparative study of the various
algorithms used to perform the transit identification, to determine
rigorously and fairly which one is the most sensitive under which
circumstances, to maximize the results of past, current, and future
observational campaigns.