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Improving and assessing planet sensitivity of the GPI exoplanet survey with a forward model matched filter

Authors :
Inseok Song
Lisa Poyneer
Stanimir Metchev
Jeffrey Chilcote
Patrick Ingraham
James R. Graham
Gaspard Duchêne
René Doyon
Marshall D. Perrin
Kimberly Ward-Duong
Sandrine Thomas
Bruce Macintosh
Jason J. Wang
Adam C. Schneider
Abhijith Rajan
James E. Larkin
Jean-Baptiste Ruffio
Anand Sivaramakrishnan
Maxwell A. Millar-Blanchaer
Franck Marchis
Mark S. Marley
Quinn Konopacky
Jérôme Maire
Sloane J. Wiktorowicz
Julien Rameau
Robert J. De Rosa
Fredrik T. Rantakyrö
Laurent Pueyo
Jennifer Patience
Dmitry Savransky
Stephen J. Goodsell
Schuyler Wolff
Pascale Hibon
J. Kent Wallace
Katie M. Morzinski
Katherine B. Follette
Tara Cotten
Li-Wei Hung
Rebecca Oppenheimer
Ian Czekala
Alexandra Z. Greenbaum
Christian Marois
David Palmer
Eric L. Nielsen
Pauline Arriaga
Paul Kalas
Rémi Soummer
Vanessa P. Bailey
Travis Barman
Benjamin L. Gerard
Joanna Bulger
Michael P. Fitzgerald
Source :
NASA Astrophysics Data System, The Astrophysical Journal, vol 842, iss 1, Ruffio, JB; Macintosh, B; Wang, JJ; Pueyo, L; Nielsen, EL; Rosa, RJD; et al.(2017). Improving and Assessing Planet Sensitivity of the GPI Exoplanet Survey with a Forward Model Matched Filter. Astrophysical Journal, 842(1). doi: 10.3847/1538-4357/aa72dd. UCLA: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/3wb2h29w, Astrophysical Journal, vol 842, iss 1
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
IOP, 2017.

Abstract

We present a new matched filter algorithm for direct detection of point sources in the immediate vicinity of bright stars. The stellar Point Spread Function (PSF) is first subtracted using a Karhunen-Lo\'eve Image Processing (KLIP) algorithm with Angular and Spectral Differential Imaging (ADI and SDI). The KLIP-induced distortion of the astrophysical signal is included in the matched filter template by computing a forward model of the PSF at every position in the image. To optimize the performance of the algorithm, we conduct extensive planet injection and recovery tests and tune the exoplanet spectra template and KLIP reduction aggressiveness to maximize the Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) of the recovered planets. We show that only two spectral templates are necessary to recover any young Jovian exoplanets with minimal SNR loss. We also developed a complete pipeline for the automated detection of point source candidates, the calculation of Receiver Operating Characteristics (ROC), false positives based contrast curves, and completeness contours. We process in a uniform manner more than 330 datasets from the Gemini Planet Imager Exoplanet Survey (GPIES) and assess GPI typical sensitivity as a function of the star and the hypothetical companion spectral type. This work allows for the first time a comparison of different detection algorithms at a survey scale accounting for both planet completeness and false positive rate. We show that the new forward model matched filter allows the detection of $50\%$ fainter objects than a conventional cross-correlation technique with a Gaussian PSF template for the same false positive rate.<br />Comment: ApJ accepted

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
NASA Astrophysics Data System, The Astrophysical Journal, vol 842, iss 1, Ruffio, JB; Macintosh, B; Wang, JJ; Pueyo, L; Nielsen, EL; Rosa, RJD; et al.(2017). Improving and Assessing Planet Sensitivity of the GPI Exoplanet Survey with a Forward Model Matched Filter. Astrophysical Journal, 842(1). doi: 10.3847/1538-4357/aa72dd. UCLA: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/3wb2h29w, Astrophysical Journal, vol 842, iss 1
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d4325ae99c09e9d731d8c7f4c8782a6f