Quantifying the challenges of detecting unseen planetary companions with transit timing variations
Dimitri Veras, Eric B. Ford, Matthew J. Payne

TL;DR
This study systematically analyzes the complexities and degeneracies in detecting unseen planetary companions through transit timing variations (TTVs), providing insights and tools for future observational planning.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive exploration of TTV signal dependencies, phase space plots for observers, and demonstrates how autocorrelation can help identify potential planetary orbits.
Findings
TTV amplitudes vary significantly with small orbital parameter changes.
Approximately 50 observations are needed to characterize unseen planets effectively.
Distinct TTV signatures are produced near period commensurabilities p:q.
Abstract
Both ground and space-based transit observatories are poised to significantly increase the number of known transiting planets and the number of precisely measured transit times. The variation in a planet's transit times may be used to infer the presence of additional planets. Deducing the masses and orbital parameters of such planets from transit time variations (TTVs) alone is a rich and increasingly relevant dynamical problem. In this work, we evaluate the extent of the degeneracies in this process, systematically explore the dependence of TTV signals on several parameters and provide phase space plots that could aid observers in planning future observations. Our explorations are focused on a likely-to-be prevalent situation: a known transiting short-period Neptune or Jupiter-sized planet and a suspected external low-mass perturber on a nearly-coplanar orbit. Through approximately…
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