Search for planetary candidates within the OGLE stars - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Search for planetary candidates within the OGLE stars

Description:

7 known planets: HD 209458, TrES-1, OGLE-TR-10, 56, 111, 113, and 132 ... TrES-1. Model test results. Fit Parameters. Equations. 4 unknowns: M1, R1, M2, and R2 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:28
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 30
Provided by: adrian84
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Search for planetary candidates within the OGLE stars


1
Search for planetary candidates within the OGLE
stars
  • Adriana V. R. Silva Patrícia C. Cruz
  • CRAAM/Mackenzie

COROT 2005 - 05/11/2005
2
Summary
  • Method to distinguish between planetary and
    stellar companions
  • Observed transits in OGLE data
  • 177 stars
  • Model
  • Orbital parameters P r/Rs, a/Rs, i
  • Keplers 3rd law mass-radius relation for MS
    stars
  • Results tested on 7 known bonafide planets
  • 28 proposed planetary candidates for
    spectroscopic follow up
  • Silva Cruz Astrophysical Journal Letters,
    637, 2006 (astro-ph/0505281)

3
Planet definition
  • Based on the objects mass
  • According to the IAU WORKING GROUP ON EXTRASOLAR
    PLANETS (WGESP)
  • stars objects capable of thermonuclear fusion of
    hydrogen (gt0.075 Msun)
  • Brown dwarf capable of deuterium burning
    (0.013ltMlt0.075 Msun)
  • Planets objects with masses below the deuterium
    fusion limit (Mlt13 MJup), that orbit stars or
    stellar remains (independently of the way in
    which they formed).

4
(No Transcript)
5
Newtons gravitation law
  • Both planet and star orbit their common
    center-of-mass.
  • Planets gravitational attraction causes a small
    variation in the stars light.
  • The effect will be greater for close in massive
    planets.

6
Extra-solar Planets Encyclopedia
  • www.obspm.fr/encycl/encycl.html
  • 169 planets (until 24/10/2005)
  • 145 planetary systems
  • 18 multiple planetary systems
  • 9 transiting HD 209458, TrES-1, OGLE 10, 56,
    111, 113, 132, HD 189733, HD 149026.

7
Radial velocity shifts
Planetary mass determined
8
Venus transit 8 June 2004
9
Transits
10
HD209458
In 2000, confirmation that the radial velocity
measurements were indeed due to an orbiting
planet.
11
Planetary detection by transits
  • Only 9 confirmed planets.
  • Orbits practically perpendicular to the plane of
    the sky (i90o).
  • Radial velocity planet mass
  • Transit planet radius and orbit inclination
    angle
  • Ground based telescopes able to detect giant
    planets only. Satellite based observations needed
    for detection of Earth like planets.

12
OGLE project
  • 177 planets with transits
  • Only 5 confirmed as planets by radial velocity
    measurements (10, 56, 111, 113, 132).
  • OGLE data (Udalski 2002, 2003, 2004)
  • Published orbital period
  • Model the data to obtain
  • r/Rs (planet radius)
  • aorb/Rs (orbital radius assumed circular
    orbit)
  • i (inclination angle).

13
Transit simulation
14
Model
  • Star ? white light image of the sun
  • Planet ? dark disk of radius r/Rs
  • Transit at each time interval, the planet is
    centered at a given position in its orbit (with
    aorb/Rs and i) and the total flux is calculated

15
Transit Simulation
16
Lightcurve
  • ?I/I(r/Rs)2, larger planets cause bigger dimming
    in brightness.
  • For Jupiter ? 1 decrease
  • Larger orbital radius (planet further from the
    star) yield shorter phase interval.
  • Inclination angle close to 90o (a transit is
    observed).
  • Smaller angles, shorter phase interval
  • Grazing transits for ilt80o.

17
Orbit
  • Circular orbits
  • Period from OGLE project
  • Perform a search in parameter space for the best
    values of r/Rs, aorb/Rs, and i (minimum ?2).
  • Error estimate of the model parameters from 1000
    Monte Carlo simulation, taken from only those
    within 1 sigma uncertainty of the data

18
Test of the model
  • 7 known planets HD 209458, TrES-1, OGLE-TR-10,
    56, 111, 113, and 132
  • OGLE-TR-122 which companion is a brown dwarf with
    M0.092 Msun and R0.12 Rsun (Pont et al. 2005)
  • Synthetic lightcurve with random noise added.

M1 (Msun) M2 (Msun) R2 (RJ) Semi-axis AU) angle
Input 4.00 0.32 3.9 0.075 84
Output 3.75 0.29 3.6 0.074 85.3
19
OGLE 132
OGLE 122
test
OGLE 56
OGLE 111
OGLE 113
OGLE 10
HD209458
TrES-1
20
Model test results
21
Fit Parameters
22
Equations
  • 4 unknowns M1, R1, M2, and R2
  • Keplers 3rd law
  • Transit depth ?I/I
  • Mass-radius relationship for MS stars (Allen
    Astrophysical Quantities, Cox 2000) for both
    primary and secondary

23
Model parameters
24
Planetary candidates selection
  • Density
  • Densities lt 0.7 to rule out big stars (O, B, A)
    1-2 dimming due to 0.3-0.5 Msun companions
  • Densities gt 2.3 maybe due to M dwarfs or binary
    systems.
  • Radius of the secondary
  • 28 candidates

25
Model parameters
0.7lt?lt2.3 R2lt1.5 RJ
26
(No Transcript)
27
Comparison with other results
  • 100 agreement with
  • Elipsoidal variation periodic modulation in
    brightness due to tidal effects between the two
    stars (Drake 2003, Sirko Paczynski 2003)
  • Low resolution radial velocity obs. (Dreizler et
    al. 2002, Konacki et al. 2003)
  • Giants espectroscopic study in IR (Gallardo et
    al. (2005)
  • 6 stars (OGLE-49, 151, 159, 165, 169, 170) failed
    the criterion of Tingley Sackett (2005) of ?gt1.

28
Conclusions
  • From the transit observation of a dim object in
    front of the main star, one obtains
  • Ratio of the companion to the main star radii
    r/Rs
  • Orbital radius (circular) in units of stellar
    radius aorb/Rs
  • Orbital inclination angle, i, and period, P.
  • Combining Keplers 3rd law, a mass-radius
    relation (R?M0.8), and the transit depth ? infer
    the mass and radius of the primary and secondary
    objects.
  • Model was tested successfully on 7 known planets.
  • 28 planetary candidates density between 0.7 and
    2.3 solar density and secondary radius lt 1.5 RJ.
  • Method does not work for brown dwarfs with M?0.1
    Msun and sizes similar to Jupiters.

29
CoRoT
  • Method can be easily applied to CoRoT
    observations of transits.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com