Deep MMT Transit Survey of the Open Cluster M37 IV: Limit on the Fraction of Stars With Planets as Small as 0.3 R_J
J.D. Hartman, B.S. Gaudi, M.J. Holman, B.A. McLeod, K.Z. Stanek, J.A., Barranco, M.H. Pinsonneault, S. Meibom, J.S. Kalirai

TL;DR
This study conducted a deep transit survey of the open cluster M37 and surrounding field stars, finding no planets smaller than Jupiter but setting upper limits on their occurrence rates, including for Neptune-sized planets.
Contribution
First transit survey to constrain the fraction of stars hosting planets as small as Neptune in open clusters and field stars, using extensive Monte Carlo simulations.
Findings
No transiting planets detected in M37 cluster.
Upper limits on planet occurrence rates as small as 0.3 R_J.
Detection of a candidate 1 R_J planet in the field star sample.
Abstract
We present the results of a deep (15 ~< r ~< 23), 20 night survey for transiting planets in the intermediate age open cluster M37 (NGC 2099) using the Megacam wide-field mosaic CCD camera on the 6.5m MMT. We do not detect any transiting planets among the ~1450 observed cluster members. We do, however, identify a ~ 1 R_J candidate planet transiting a ~ 0.8 Msun Galactic field star with a period of 0.77 days. The source is faint (V = 19.85 mag) and has an expected velocity semi-amplitude of K ~ 220 m/s (M/M_J). We conduct Monte Carlo transit injection and recovery simulations to calculate the 95% confidence upper limit on the fraction of cluster members and field stars with planets as a function of planetary radius and orbital period. Assuming a uniform logarithmic distribution in orbital period, we find that < 1.1%, < 2.7% and < 8.3% of cluster members have 1.0 R_J planets within…
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