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Planet Hunters NGTS: New Planet Candidates from a Citizen Science Search of the Next Generation Transit Survey Public Data

Authors :
Sean M. O’Brien
Megan E. Schwamb
Samuel Gill
Christopher A. Watson
Matthew R. Burleigh
Alicia Kendall
Sarah L. Casewell
David R. Anderson
José I. Vines
James S. Jenkins
Douglas R. Alves
Laura Trouille
Solène Ulmer-Moll
Edward M. Bryant
Ioannis Apergis
Matthew Battley
Daniel Bayliss
Nora L. Eisner
Edward Gillen
Michael R. Goad
Maximilian N. Günther
Beth A. Henderson
Jeong-Eun Heo
David G. Jackson
Chris Lintott
James McCormac
Maximiliano Moyano
Louise D. Nielsen
Ares Osborn
Suman Saha
Ramotholo R. Sefako
Andrew W. Stephens
Rosanna H. Tilbrook
Stéphane Udry
Richard G. West
Peter J. Wheatley
Tafadzwa Zivave
See Min Lim
Arttu Sainio
Source :
The Astronomical Journal, Vol 167, Iss 5, p 238 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2024.

Abstract

We present the results from the first two years of the Planet Hunters Next Generation Transit Survey (NGTS) citizen science project, which searches for transiting planet candidates in data from the NGTS by enlisting the help of members of the general public. Over 8000 registered volunteers reviewed 138,198 light curves from the NGTS Public Data Releases 1 and 2. We utilize a user weighting scheme to combine the classifications of multiple users to identify the most promising planet candidates not initially discovered by the NGTS team. We highlight the five most interesting planet candidates detected through this search, which are all candidate short-period giant planets. This includes the TIC-165227846 system that, if confirmed, would be the lowest-mass star to host a close-in giant planet. We assess the detection efficiency of the project by determining the number of confirmed planets from the NASA Exoplanet Archive and TESS Objects of Interest (TOIs) successfully recovered by this search and find that 74% of confirmed planets and 63% of TOIs detected by NGTS are recovered by the Planet Hunters NGTS project. The identification of new planet candidates shows that the citizen science approach can provide a complementary method to the detection of exoplanets with ground-based surveys such as NGTS.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15383881
Volume :
167
Issue :
5
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Astronomical Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4f569bb3bc7c49b9b2f4b7f90f82d918
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ad32c8