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Transiting Extrasolar Planets Recent Progress, XO Survey, and the Future Christopher J. Burke
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Solar System Has Predominately Circular Orbits Top View Side View
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Planet Formation NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt (SSC)
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Exceptions Non-circular Eccentricity Pluto Sedna Nasa/Caltech Courtesy of Windows to the Universe, http://www.windows.ucar.edu
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~200 Extrasolar Planets
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● >7% stars have Jupiter mass planets within 5 AU ● 1.2% stars have Hot Jupiter planets ● Most planets have a>1 AU Fischer & Valenti 2005 Metallicity Correlation
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● Multi-planet systems common (>30%) Wright et al. (2006) ● Low mass planets more common than high mass planets. ● 5.5 Earth mass planet Beaulieu et al. (2006) NASA/JPL-Caltech/T. Pyle (SSC)
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How do you detect planets? Radial Velocity Technique Only Measure Planet Mass Doppler Shifted Light ©Think Quest
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flux time Transit Technique Extrasolar Planet Detection Δf = (R p /R * ) 2 ~1% Measure Radius!!
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Charbonneau et al. 2006, Brown et al. 2001
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Core Dominated Inflated Radius 70 M earth core Sato et al. (2005) & Fortney et al. (2005) Difficult to explain Charbonneau et al. 2006
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● Highly accurate radii ● Stellar limb darkening What do we learn from Transiting Planets? Dan Bruton
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HD 209458b Knutson et al. (2006)
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● Highly accurate planet radii ● Stellar limb darkening ● Characterize planet atmosphere Transmission spectroscopy Na, H, C, O detection HD 209458 Charbonneau et al. (2002), Vidal-Madjar (2003, 2004) What do we learn from Transiting Planets?
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Compare Spectra Out of Transit In Transit Vidal-Madjar (2003)
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● Highly accurate planet radii ● Stellar limb darkening ● Characterize planet atmosphere Phased light curve – optical What do we learn from Transiting Planets?
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Albedo <0.25 Rowe et al. (2006) will soon reach ~0.1 limits Hot Jupiter planets are dark! Reflected Light
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● Highly accurate planet radii ● Stellar limb darkening ● Characterize planet atmosphere Secondary Eclipse – IR Test planet atmosphere models What do we learn from Transiting Planets?
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NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt (SSC)
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Constrain atmosphere metallicity, clouds, redistribution of heat, perhaps CO & H 2 O Disentagling these effects may be difficult Burrows et al. (2006)
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Motivated to find bright transiting planets XO Transit Survey PI Peter McCullough Jeff Valenti Ken Janes, Boston U Jim Heasley, U of Hawaii Chris Johns-Krull, Rice U Extended Team Professionals & “Amateurs” Ron Bissinger, CA Mike Fleenor, TN Cindy Foote, UT Enrique Garcia, Spain Bruce Gary, AZ Paul Howell, ME Franco Malia, Italy Gianluca Masi, Italy Tonny Vanmunster, Belgium
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Haleakala, Maui
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Baker Nunn Observatory 1957 Built to track satellites in particular Sputnik www.ifa.hawaii.edu/users/steiger/post_cook.htm
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Today houses XO
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Every 10 min 7.2 o x 63 o strip 10 cm aperture
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Why have so few transits been found? ● Only 1.2% stars have Hot Jupiter planets ● The probability for a Hot Jupiter to transit ~10% ● Most stars are too big (sub-giant or giant) In magnitude limited survey only 10% of stars are dwarfs Gould & Morgan (2003) ● There are many objects that mimic a transit signal
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Transit Imposters Transit surveys yield 10/1 false positives ● Dwarf star eclipsing a subgiant/giant ● Grazing eclipsing binary ● Triple star / blend diluted deep eclipse ● Brown dwarfs
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Transit Imposters
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96 M Jup Brown dwarf same radius as planet! Radial Velocity Followup Required!
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How does XO deal with imposters Stellar spectral type estimate Photometric catalogs - Tycho, 2MASS, TASS Transit duration, depth, and period consistent with a planet orbiting the estimated stellar spectral type
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Closer stars Higher Proper Motion 1955 1993 2000 NASA/IPAC Infrared Science Archive DSS1 DSS2 2MASS Discriminate dwarfs from giants
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XO's Extended Team
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Blending
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Triple Stars
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XO has time on the Hobby-Eberly Telescope for precision RV Confirmed XO-1b as a bona fide planet
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Future of Extrasolar Planets HARPS now achieves 20 cm/s RV stability over several days ESO La Silla 3.6m Pont priv. comm. (2006)
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Space Based Transit Searches COROT – Launched Dec. 26 27cm primary 2.5 year duration 150 day continuous
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KEPLER – Nov. 2008 1.4m primary 4 year duration fully continuous 42 CCDs to fill 1.2 o diameter FOV 100,000 stars V<15.0 Space Based Transit Searches
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Precision Transit Timing Sensitive to moons, rings, stellar spots Can detect Earth mass planets in resonance XO Future XO-2b, XO-3b, XO-4b,... Expansion to 3+ mounts in 2007
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