Bibcode
Guenther, E. W.; Tal-Or, L.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 521, id.A83
Fecha de publicación:
10
2010
Revista
Número de citas
9
Número de citas referidas
7
Descripción
Context. Transit search programs such as CoRoT and Kepler now have the
capability of detecting planets as small as the Earth. The detection of
these planets however requires the removal of all false positives.
Although many false positives can be identified by a detailed analysis
of the light-curves (LCs), the detections of others require additional
observations. An important source of false positives are faint eclipsing
binaries within the point spread function (PSF) of the target star. For
example, triple stars are an important source of false positives.
Unfortunately, most of the methods previously applied have difficulties
in detecting these objects. Aims: We develop a new method that
allows us to detect faint eclipsing binaries with a separation smaller
than one arcsec from target stars. We thereby focus on binaries that
mimic the transits of terrestrial planets. These binaries can be either
at the same distance as the target star (triple stars), or at either
larger, or smaller distances. Methods: A close inspection of the
problem indicates that these systems contain either late-type stars, or
stars of high extinction. Thus, in both cases the binaries are brighter
in the infrared than in the optical regime. We show how high resolution
infrared (hereafter IR) spectroscopy can be used to remove these false
positives. Results: For the triple star case, we find that the
brightness difference between a primary and an eclipsing secondary is
about 9-10 mag in the visual but only about 4.5-5.9 mag in the K-band.
In the next step, we demonstrate how the triple star hypothesis can be
excluded by taking a high-resolution IR spectrum. Simulations of these
systems show that the companions can be detected with a false-alarm
probability of ~ 2%, if the spectrum has a signal-to-noise ratio (S/N)
≥ 100. We subsequently show that high-resolution IR spectra also
allows to detect most of the false positives caused by foreground or
background binaries. Conclusions: If high resolution IR
spectroscopy is combined with photometric methods, virtually all false
positives can be detected without radial velocity (RV) measurements. It
is thus possible to confirm transiting terrestrial planets with a modest
investment of observing time.
Partly based on observations obtained at the European Southern
Observatory at Paranal, Chile in program 081.C-0033(A).