Planetary transit timing variations induced by stellar binarity. The light travel time effect
M. Montalto (Max-Planck-Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics,, Germany & Universitaetssternwarte Muenchen, Germany)

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how stellar binarity can induce detectable transit timing variations in hot-jupiter systems via the light travel time effect, providing estimates of detection probabilities over time.
Contribution
It derives the expected frequency of binary companions detectable through transit timing variations, considering observational biases and orbital configurations.
Findings
Approximately 1% of hot-jupiter hosts show >50 sec TTVs after 5 years due to binarity.
Detection probability increases to about 2.8% after 10 years for coplanar orbits.
Transit timing variations can reveal stellar companions up to 36 AU separation after 5 years.
Abstract
[ABRIDGED] Since the discovery of the first transiting extrasolar planet, transit timing has been recognized as a powerful method to discover and characterize additional planets in these systems. However, the gravitational influence of additional planets is not the only expected source of transit timing variations. In this work, we derive the expected detection frequency of stellar companions of hot-jupiter transiting planets host-stars, detectable by means of transit timing analysis. Since roughly half of the stars in the solar neighborhood belong to binary or multiple stellar systems, the same fraction of binary systems may be expected to be present among transiting planet-host stars, unless planet formation is significantly influenced by the presence of a stellar companion. Transit searches are less affected by the selection biases against long-period binaries that plague radial…
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