Detecting circumbinary planets using eclipse timing of binary stars - numerical simulations
P. Sybilski, M. Konacki, S. Koz{\l}owski

TL;DR
This paper investigates the potential of using eclipse timing variations in binary stars, through numerical simulations, to detect circumbinary planets, assessing the method's sensitivity and optimal observing strategies.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the eclipse timing method for detecting circumbinary planets, including the effects of noise and the capabilities of space and ground-based photometry.
Findings
Eclipse timing can detect substellar and planetary mass companions.
Sensitivity depends on binary and observational parameters.
Space missions like Kepler improve detection prospects.
Abstract
The presence of a body in an orbit around a close eclipsing binary star manifests itself through the light time effect influencing the observed times of eclipses as the close binary and the circumbinary companion both move around the common centre of mass. This fact combined with the periodicity with which the eclipses occur can be used to detect the companion. Given a sufficient precision of the times of eclipses, the eclipse timing can be employed to detect substellar or even planetary mass companions. The main goal of the paper is to investigate the potential of the photometry based eclipse timing of binary stars as a method of detecting circumbinary planets. In the models we assume that the companion orbits a binary star in a circular Keplerian orbit. We analyze both the space and ground based photometry cases. In particular, we study the usefulness of the on-going COROT and…
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