Bibcode
Mazeh, T.; Holczer, T.; Shporer, A.
Referencia bibliográfica
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 800, Issue 2, article id. 142, 12 pp. (2015).
Fecha de publicación:
2
2015
Revista
Número de citas
32
Número de citas referidas
30
Descripción
Some transiting planets discovered by the Kepler mission display transit
timing variations (TTVs) induced by stellar spots that rotate on the
visible hemisphere of their parent stars. An induced TTV can be observed
when a planet crosses a spot and modifies the shape of the transit light
curve, even if the time resolution of the data does not allow the
detection of the crossing event itself. We present an approach that can,
in some cases, use the derived TTVs of a planet to distinguish between a
prograde and a retrograde planetary motion with respect to the stellar
rotation. Assuming a single spot darker than the stellar disk, spot
crossing by the planet can induce measured positive (negative) TTV, if
the crossing occurs in the first (second) half of the transit. On the
other hand, the motion of the spot toward (away from) the center of the
stellar visible disk causes the stellar brightness to decrease
(increase). Therefore, for a planet with prograde motion, the induced
TTV is positive when the local slope of the stellar flux at the time of
transit is negative, and vice versa. Thus, we can expect to observe a
negative (positive) correlation between the TTVs and the photometric
slopes for prograde (retrograde) motion. Using a simplistic analytical
approximation, and also the publicly available SOAP-T tool to produce
light curves of transits with spot-crossing events, we show for some
cases how the induced TTVs depend on the local stellar photometric
slopes at the transit timings. Detecting this correlation in Kepler
transiting systems with high enough signal-to-noise ratio can allow us
to distinguish between prograde and retrograde planetary motions. In
upcoming papers we present analyses of the KOIs and Kepler eclipsing
binaries, following the formalism developed here.