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Transit Search for Exoplanets around Alpha Centauri A and B with ASTERIA

Authors :
Jessica Loveland
Alessandra Babuscia
Tobias Gedenk
Sara Seager
Maximilian N. Günther
Tejas Kulkarni
Peter Di Pasquale
Kyle Hughes
Akshata Krishnamurthy
Jason Luu
Matthew Smith
Brice-Olivier Demory
Joel Krajewski
Christopher M. Pong
Mary White
Robert L. Bocchino
Tansu Daylan
Colin H. Smith
Amanda Donner
Lorraine Fesq
Mary Knapp
Cody Colley
Brian Campuzano
Vanessa P. Bailey
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Astronomical Society, 2021.

Abstract

Alpha Centauri is a triple star system with two Sun-like stars, α Cen A (V = 0.01) and B (V = 1.33), and a third fainter red dwarf star, Proxima Centauri. Most current transit missions cannot produce precision photometry of α Cen A and B as their detectors saturate for these very bright stars. The Arcsecond Space Telescope Enabling Research in Astrophysics (ASTERIA) was a technology demonstration mission that successfully demonstrated two key technologies necessary for precision photometry achieving line-of-sight fine-pointing stability of 0.5″ rms and focal plane temperature control of ±0.01 K over a period of 20 minutes. The payload consisted of a 6.7 cm aperture diameter refractive camera and used a scientific complementary metal-oxide semiconductor detector that enabled monitoring of the brightest stars without saturating. We obtained spatially unresolved (blended) observations of α Cen A and B during opportunistic science campaigns as part of ASTERIA’s extended mission. The resulting 1σ photometric precision for the blended α Cen A and B data is 250 ppm (parts per million) per 9 s exposure. We do not find evidence of transits in the blended data. We establish limits for transiting exoplanets around both α Cen A and B using transit signal injection and recovery tests. We find that ASTERIA is sensitive to planets with radii as small as 3.0 R ⊕ around α Cen A and 3.7 R ⊕ around α Cen B, corresponding to signals of ∼500 ppm (signal-to-noise ratio = 5.0) in the blended data, with periods ranging from 0.5 to 6 days.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1fad9fe47961ebbcba75e2f6e5d5fbd8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48350/167702