Back to Search Start Over

Planetary Transit Candidates in the CSTAR Field: Analysis of the 2008 Data

Authors :
Wang, Songhu
Zhang, Hui
Zhou, Ji-Lin
Zhou, Xu
Yang, Ming
Wang, Lifan
Bayliss, D.
Zhou, G.
Ashley, M. C. B.
Fan, Zhou
Feng, Long-Long
Gong, Xuefei
Lawrence, J. S.
Liu, Huigen
Liu, Qiang
Luong-Van, D. M.
Ma, Jun
Meng, Zeyang
Storey, J. W. V.
Wittenmyer, R. A.
Wu, Zhenyu
Yan, Jun
Yang, Huigen
Yang, Ji
Yang, Jiayi
Yuan, Xiangyan
Zhang, Tianmeng
Zhu, Zhenxi
Zou, Hu
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

The Chinese Small Telescope ARray (CSTAR) is a group of four identical, fully automated, static 14.5 cm telescopes. CSTAR is located at Dome A, Antarctica and covers 20 square degree of sky around the South Celestial Pole. The installation is designed to provide high-cadence photometry for the purpose of monitoring the quality of the astronomical observing conditions at Dome A and detecting transiting exoplanets. CSTAR has been operational since 2008, and has taken a rich and high-precision photometric data set of 10,690 stars. In the first observing season, we obtained 291,911 qualified science frames with 20-second integrations in the i-band. Photometric precision reaches about 4 mmag at 20-second cadence at i=7.5, and is about 20 mmag at i=12. Using robust detection methods, ten promising exoplanet candidates were found. Four of these were found to be giants using spectroscopic follow-up. All of these transit candidates are presented here along with the discussion of their detailed properties as well as the follow-up observations.<br />Comment: 19 pages, 14 Figures, accepted by ApJ Supplement

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1403.0086
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0067-0049/211/2/26