SIMBAD references

2014ApJ...792...79B - Astrophys. J., 792, 79 (2014/September-1)

Transit and radial velocity survey efficiency comparison for a habitable zone Earth.

BURKE C.J. and McCULLOUGH P.R.

Abstract (from CDS):

Transit and radial velocity searches are two techniques for identifying nearby extrasolar planets to Earth that transit bright stars. Identifying a robust sample of these exoplanets around bright stars for detailed atmospheric characterization is a major observational undertaking. In this study we describe a framework that answers the question of whether a transit or radial velocity survey is more efficient at finding transiting exoplanets given the same amount of observing time. Within the framework we show that a transit survey's window function can be approximated using the hypergeometric probability distribution. We estimate the observing time required for a transit survey to find a transiting Earth-sized exoplanet in the habitable zone (HZ) with an emphasis on late-type stars. We also estimate the radial velocity precision necessary to detect the equivalent HZ Earth-mass exoplanet that also transits when using an equal amount of observing time as the transit survey. We find that a radial velocity survey with σrv∼ 0.6 m/s precision has comparable efficiency in terms of observing time to a transit survey with the requisite photometric precision σphot∼ 300 ppm to find a transiting Earth-sized exoplanet in the HZ of late M dwarfs. For super-Earths, a σrv∼ 2.0 m/s precision radial velocity survey has comparable efficiency to a transit survey with σphot∼ 2300 ppm.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): eclipses - methods: statistical - planetary systems - surveys - techniques: photometric - techniques: radial velocities

Simbad objects: 3

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