An a priori investigation of astrophysical false positives in ground-based transiting planet surveys
Tom M. Evans, Penny D. Sackett

TL;DR
This study predicts false positive rates in ground-based transit surveys for Hot Jupiters caused by stellar eclipsing binaries, emphasizing the importance of identifying blended stars for accurate planet detection.
Contribution
It provides a priori estimates of false positives and genuine detections in realistic shallow and deep ground-based surveys, highlighting key binary configurations causing false positives.
Findings
False positives outnumber planet detections by ~10 in shallow surveys.
Deep surveys show 1-2 false positives per genuine planet.
Blended stellar configurations significantly impact detection accuracy.
Abstract
Astrophysical false positives due to stellar eclipsing binaries pose one of the greatest challenges to ground-based surveys for transiting Hot Jupiters. We have used known properties of multiple star systems and Hot Jupiter systems to predict, a priori, the number of such false detections and the number of genuine planet detections recovered in two hypothetical but realistic ground-based transit surveys targeting fields close to the galactic plane (b~10 degrees): a shallow survey covering a magnitude range 10<V<13, and a deep survey covering a magnitude range 15<V<19. Our results are consistent with the commonly-reported experience of false detections outnumbering planet detections by a factor of ~10 in shallow surveys, while in our synthetic deep survey we find ~1-2 false detections for every planet detection. We characterize the eclipsing binary configurations that are most likely to…
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