High-resolution infrared spectroscopy as a tool to detect false positives of transit search programs
Eike W. Guenther, Lev Tal-Or

TL;DR
High-resolution infrared spectroscopy can effectively identify and eliminate false positives in transit searches, especially faint eclipsing binaries, enabling more reliable detection of terrestrial exoplanets.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new high-resolution IR spectroscopic method to detect faint eclipsing binaries that mimic planetary transits, improving false positive identification.
Findings
Infrared brightness differences help distinguish false positives from true planets.
High-resolution IR spectra can detect faint binaries with high confidence.
Combining IR spectroscopy with photometry reduces the need for RV measurements.
Abstract
Transit search programs such as CoRoT and Kepler now have the capability of detecting planets as small as the Earth. The detection of these planets however requires the removal of all false positives. Although many false positives can be identified by a detailed analysis of the LCs, the detections of others require additional observations. An important source of false positives are faint eclipsing binaries within the PSF of the target stars. We develop a new method that allows us to detect faint eclipsing binaries with a separation smaller than one arcsec from target stars. We thereby focus on binaries that mimic the transits of terrestrial planets. These binaries can be either at the same distance as the target star (triple stars), or at either larger, or smaller distances. A close inspection of the problem indicates that in all relevant cases the binaries are brighter in the infrared…
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