Photometric transit search for planets around cool stars from the Western Italian Alps: a site characterization study
M. Damasso, P. Giacobbe, P. Calcidese, A. Sozzetti, M.G. Lattanzi, A., Bernagozzi, E. Bertolini, R.L. Smart

TL;DR
This study assesses the suitability of the Western Italian Alps site for detecting small exoplanets around cool stars through photometric transit searches, focusing on sky quality, weather, and observational conditions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive site characterization including sky brightness, seeing, and photometric precision, demonstrating the site's potential for exoplanet transit observations.
Findings
Sky brightness is comparable to dark sites.
Median seeing is approximately 1.7 arcseconds.
Useful observing nights constitute about 57% of the year.
Abstract
We present the results of a site characterization study carried out at the Astronomical Observatory of the Autonomous Region of the Aosta Valley (OAVdA), in the Western Italian Alps, aimed at establishing its potential to host a photometric transit search for small-size planets around a statistically significant sample of nearby cool M dwarfs. [abridged] we gauged site-dependent observing conditions such as night-sky brightness, photometric precision, and seeing properties. Public meteorological data were also used in order to help in the determination of the actual number of useful observing nights per year. The measured zenithal -band night-sky brightness is typical of that of very good, very dark observing sites. The extinction registered at band is not dissimilar from that of other sites. The median seeing over the period of in situ observations is found to be…
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