Bibcode
Burton, J. R.; Watson, C. A.; Rodríguez-Gil, P.; Skillen, I.; Littlefair, S. P.; Dhillon, S.; Pollacco, D.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 446, Issue 1, p.1071-1082
Advertised on:
1
2015
Citations
18
Refereed citations
16
Description
We report on a pilot study of a novel observing technique, defocused
transmission spectroscopy, and its application to the study of exoplanet
atmospheres using ground-based platforms. Similar to defocused
photometry, defocused transmission spectroscopy has an added advantage
over normal spectroscopy in that it reduces systematic errors due to
flat-fielding, point spread function variations, slit-jaw imperfections
and other effects associated with ground-based observations. For one of
the planetary systems studied, WASP-12b, we report a tentative detection
of additional Na absorption of 0.12 ± 0.03[+0.03] per cent during
transit using a 2 Å wavelength mask. After consideration of a
systematic that occurs mid-transit, it is likely that the true depth is
actually closer to 0.15 per cent. This is a similar level of absorption
reported in the atmosphere of HD 209458b (0.135 ± 0.017 per cent;
Snellen et al. 2008). Finally, we outline methods that will improve the
technique during future observations, based on our findings from this
pilot study.
Related projects
Binary Stars
The study of binary stars is essential to stellar astrophysics. A large number of stars form and evolve within binary systems. Therefore, their study is fundamental to understand stellar and galactic evolution. Particularly relevant is that binary systems are still the best source of precise stellar mass and radius measurements. Research lines
Pablo
Rodríguez Gil