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91̽»¨
Stellar_flare_hits_HD_189733_b_(artist's_impression)

This artist's impression shows the hot Jupiter HD 189733b, as it passes in front of its parent star, as the latter is flaring, driving material away from the planet. The escaping atmosphere is seen silhouetted against the starlight. The surface of the star, which is around 80% the mass of the Sun, is based on observations of the Sun from NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory.

Credit: NASA, ESA, L. Calçada, Solar Dynamics Observatory

Prof Suzanne Aigrain

Professor of Astrophysics

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics
  • Exoplanets and planetary physics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • Exoplanets and Stellar Physics
Suzanne.Aigrain@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)73339
Denys Wilkinson Building, room 762
  • About
  • Publications

Transiting exoplanet candidates from K2 Campaigns 5 and 6

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91̽»¨ University Press 461:4 (2016) 3399-3409

Authors:

Benjamin JS Pope, Suzanne Aigrain, Hannu Parviainen

Abstract:

We introduce a new transit search and vetting pipeline for observations from the K2 mission, and present the candidate transiting planets identified by this pipeline out of the targets in Campaigns 5 and 6. Our pipeline uses the Gaussian Process-based k 2 sc code to correct for the K2 pointing systematics and simultaneously model stellar variability. The systematics- corrected, variability-detrended light curves are searched for transits with the Box Least Squares method, and a period-dependent detection threshold is used to generate a prelimi- nary candidate list. Two or three individuals vet each candidate manually to produce the final candidate list, using a set of automatically-generated transit fits and assorted diagnostic tests to inform the vetting. We detect 147 single-planet system candidates and 5 multi-planet systems, independently recovering the previously-published hot Jupiters EPIC 212110888b, WASP- 55b (EPIC 212300977b) and Qatar-2b (EPIC 212756297b). We also report the outcome of reconnaissance spectroscopy carried out for all candidates with Kepler magnitude K p ï‚£ 13, identifying 12 targets as likely false positives. We compare our results to those of other K2 transit search pipelines, noting that ours performs particularly well for variable and / or active stars, but that the results are very similar overall. All the light curves and code used in the transit search and vetting process are publicly available, as are the follow-up spectra.

Transiting exoplanet candidates from K2 Campaigns 5 and 6

(2016)

Authors:

Benjamin JS Pope, Hannu Parviainen, Suzanne Aigrain

Rotation in the Pleiades with K2: I. Data and First Results

(2016)

Authors:

LM Rebull, JR Stauffer, J Bouvier, AM Cody, LA Hillenbrand, D Soderblom, J Valenti, D Barrado, H Bouy, D Ciardi, M Pinsonneault, K Stassun, G Micela, S Aigrain, F Vrba, G Somers, J Christiansen, E Gillen, A Collier Cameron

Rotation in the Pleiades with K2: II. Multi-Period Stars

(2016)

Authors:

LM Rebull, JR Stauffer, J Bouvier, AM Cody, LA Hillenbrand, DR Soderblom, J Valenti, D Barrado, H Bouy, D Ciardi, M Pinsonneault, K Stassun, G Micela, S Aigrain, F Vrba, G Somers, E Gillen, A Collier Cameron

Rotation in the Pleiades With K2: III. Speculations on Origins and Evolution

(2016)

Authors:

JR Stauffer, LM Rebull, J Bouvier, LA Hillenbrand, A Collier Cameron, M Pinsonneault, S Aigrain, D Barrado, H Bouy, D Ciardi, AM Cody, T David, G Micela, D Soderblom, G Somers, K Stassun, J Valenti, F Vrba

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