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Observation and analysis of the youngest transiting planet candidate. Stefanie Rätz Research Fellow, ESA, ESTEC, Noordwijk, The Netherlands. YETI – Young Exoplanet Transit Initiative Search for transiting planets in young open clusters.
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Observation and analysis of the youngest transiting planet candidate Stefanie Rätz Research Fellow, ESA, ESTEC, Noordwijk, The Netherlands
YETI – Young Exoplanet Transit InitiativeSearch for transiting planets in young open clusters • Main goal: Search for close-in, young planets and Brown Dwarfs with the transit method • Young, open star clusters provide an ideal environment because they have a relatively high number of stars of same age, metallicity and distance • Can give constraints on: • Limits for time scales of planet formation and migration • Effect of age, environment and metallicity on frequency of planets • Evolutionary models of planets and Brown Dwarfs • Additional scientific output: • Constraints on Metallicity, age, distance • Large number of variable stars could be analyzed • Different clusters in a range of 1-200 Myr were selected Neuhäuser et. al. (2011)
Transit Observation • we launched an international observing campaign • Strategy: collecting data from 0.6 - 2.6-m telescopes spread worldwide at different longitudes • Aim: Observations 24/7 • three runs per year per cluster in two or three subsequent years: typically one to two weeks long
Tenagra II 0.8-m telescope Llano del Hato Observatory 1-m Schmidt telescope Sierra Nevada 1.5-mtelescope Gunma Astronomical Observatory 1.5-m telescope Gettysburg Collage Observatory 0.4-m telescope Jena Astrophysical Institute 0.9/0.6-m telescope Stara Lesna Astronomical Institute 0.6-m telescope Byurakan 1.0 and 2.6 telescopes Xinglong Observatory 90/60 cm Observatorio Cerro Armazones two 5.9’’ telescopes Stony Brook 14““ telescope Swarthmore 0.6-m telescope Calar Alto 2.2-m telescope Nainital State Observatory 1-m telescope Torun 60cmtelescope Rozhen 0.6 and 2-m telescopes Lulin Lulin Observatory 1m Telescope Mauna Kea Univ. of Hawaii 2.2m telescope
1 Myr 3 Myrs 10 Myrs 100 Myrs 30 Myrs 25 Ori cluster(Briceño et al. 2007) • Well defined group of at least 200 low-mass pre-main-sequence stars • Concentrated within ~1° of the early-B star 25 Ori in Orion OB1a • The parallaxes of the Hipparcos stars yield a mean distance of 323 pc • Low mass members follow a well- defined band in the color-magnitude Diagram isochronal age ~7-10 Myrs • disk lifetime: ~ 5 -10 Myrs, hence 25 Ori cluster at the very age, when planet formation finishes • Most populated cluster in this age range known within 500 pc excellent laboratory to study the early evolution of sun-like stars, protoplanetary disks, and planet formation
Observations • Start ofthemonitoringof 25 Ori: January 2010 • Observationsfromthree different Observatoriesbeginningof2010 • University Observatory Jena: 15 nights • Season 1 (winter 2010/2011): • 2010 Dec. 10 – 17, 2011 Jan. 14 – 24, 2011 Feb. 16 – 28 • Observationsfrom 13 different Observatories • University Observatory Jena: 52 nights • Season 2 (winter2011/2012 ): • 2011 Dec. 05 – 16, 2012 Jan. 09 – 18, 2012 Jan. 31– Feb. 09 • Observationsfrom12 different Observatories • University Observatory Jena: 42 nights • Season 3 (winter2011/2012 ): • 2012 Dec. 04 – 14, 2013 Jan. 08 – 18, 2013 Feb. 10 – 17 • Observationsfrom 7different Observatories • University Observatory Jena: 5nights
Observations • Start of the monitoring of 25 Ori: January 2010 • Season 1 (winter 2010/2011): 52 clear nights including 13 transits • Season 2 (winter 2011/2012): 42 clear nights including 11 transits • Season 3 (winter 2012/2013): only 5 observing nights • Follow-up observations on the Observatorio de Sierra Nevada, Spain • 5 transit observations in 2013 Nov-Dec • After each season all transits were combined
Barnes et al. 2013: a precessing planet transiting a gravity-darkened star
Gravity Darkening Fast rotation star is oblate (larger radius at the equator than at the poles) poles have a higher surface gravity, and thus, higher temperature and brightness
Gaps in the observations were interpolated with 3rd order polynomials (continuity of the data points)