Bibcode
Alonso, R.; Alapini, A.; Aigrain, S.; Auvergne, M.; Baglin, A.; Barbieri, M.; Barge, P.; Bonomo, A. S.; Bordé, P.; Bouchy, F.; Chaintreuil, S.; de La Reza, R.; Deeg, H. J.; Deleuil, M.; Dvorak, R.; Erikson, A.; Fridlund, M.; de Oliveira Fialho, F.; Gondoin, P.; Guillot, T.; Hatzes, A.; Jorda, L.; Lammer, H.; Léger, A.; Llebaria, A.; Magain, P.; Mazeh, T.; Moutou, C.; Ollivier, M.; Pätzold, M.; Pont, F.; Queloz, D.; Rauer, H.; Rouan, D.; Schneider, J.; Wuchterl, G.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 506, Issue 1, 2009, pp.353-358
Advertised on:
10
2009
Journal
Citations
60
Refereed citations
51
Description
The transiting planet CoRoT-1b is thought to belong to the pM-class of
planets, in which the thermal emission dominates in the optical
wavelengths. We present a detection of its secondary eclipse in the
CoRoT white channel data, whose response function goes from ~400 to
~1000 nm. We used two different filtering approaches, and several
methods to evaluate the significance of a detection of the secondary
eclipse. We detect a secondary eclipse centered within 20 min at the
expected times for a circular orbit, with a depth of 0.016 ±
0.006%. The center of the eclipse is translated in a 1-σ upper
limit to the planet's eccentricity of e cosω< 0.014. Under the
assumption of a zero Bond Albedo and blackbody emission from the planet,
it corresponds to a T_CoRoT = 2330+120-140 K. We
provide the equilibrium temperatures of the planet as a function of the
amount of reflected light. If the planet is in thermal equilibrium with
the incident flux from the star, our results imply an inefficient
transport mechanism of the flux from the day to the night sides.
Based on observations obtained with CoRoT, a space project operated by
the French Space Agency, CNES, with participation of the Science
Programme of ESA, ESTEC/RSSD, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Germany and
Spain.
Related projects
Helio and Astero-Seismology and Exoplanets Search
The principal objectives of this project are: 1) to study the structure and dynamics of the solar interior, 2) to extend this study to other stars, 3) to search for extrasolar planets using photometric methods (primarily by transits of their host stars) and their characterization (using radial velocity information) and 4) the study of the planetary
Savita
Mathur