Re-assessing the radial-velocity evidence for planets around CoRoT-7
Frederic Pont, Suzanne Aigrain, Shay Zucker

TL;DR
This paper critically re-evaluates the radial velocity data for CoRoT-7, revealing that stellar activity and measurement errors significantly affect the detection and characterization of its planets, leading to revised mass estimates and implications for their compositions.
Contribution
It introduces a realistic model of stellar activity and measurement errors to reassess the radial velocity signals of CoRoT-7, challenging previous planet mass estimates.
Findings
Revised semi-amplitude of CoRoT-7b: 1.6 ± 1.3 m/s.
Detection significance reduced to 1.2 sigma.
Lower density and diverse composition possibilities for CoRoT-7b.
Abstract
CoRoT-7 is an 11th magnitude K-star whose light curve shows transits with depth of 0.3 mmag and a period of 0.854 d, superimposed on variability at the 1% level, due to the modulation of evolving active regions with the star's 23 d rotation period. In this paper, we revisit the published HARPS radial velocity measurements of the object, which were previously used to estimate the companion mass, but have been the subject of ongoing debate. We build a realistic model of the star's activity during the HARPS observations, by fitting simultaneously the line width and the line bisector, and use it to evaluate the contribution of activity to the RV variations. The data show clear evidence of errors above the level of the formal uncertainties, which are accounted for either by activity, nor by any plausible planet model, and which increase rapidly with decreasing signal-to-noise of the…
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