Possible detection of phase changes from the non-transiting planet HD 46375b by CoRoT
P. Gaulme, M. Vannier, T. Guillot, B. Mosser, D. Mary, W. W. Weiss,, F.-X. Schmider, S. Bourguignon, H. J. Deeg, C. R\'egulo, S. Aigrain, J., Schneider, H. Bruntt, S. Deheuvels, J.-F. Donati, T. Appourchaux, M., Auvergne, A. Baglin, F. Baudin, C. Catala, E. Michel, R. Samadi

TL;DR
This study reports the potential detection of reflected light from a non-transiting exoplanet HD 46375b using CoRoT data, demonstrating the feasibility of characterizing such planets through precise photometry and seismic analysis.
Contribution
It presents the first evidence of optical phase changes from a non-transiting exoplanet using space-based photometry, combining light curve analysis with seismic and spectropolarimetric data.
Findings
Detected sinusoidal signal consistent with planetary reflected light
Estimated planetary albedo and brightness temperature
Identified telluric contamination affecting the signal
Abstract
The present work deals with the detection of phase changes in an exoplanetary system. HD 46375 is a solar analog known to host a non-transiting Saturn-mass exoplanet with a 3.0236 day period. It was observed by the CoRoT satellite for 34 days during the fall of 2008. We attempt to identify at optical wavelengths, the changing phases of the planet as it orbits its star. We then try to improve the star model by means of a seismic analysis of the same light curve and the use of ground-based spectropolarimetric observations. The data analysis relies on the Fourier spectrum and the folding of the time series. We find evidence of a sinusoidal signal compatible in terms of both amplitude and phase with light reflected by the planet. Its relative amplitude is Delta Fp/F* = [13.0, 26.8] ppm, implying an albedo A=[0.16, 0.33] or a dayside visible brightness temperature Tb ~ [1880,2030] K by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
