Young Exoplanet Transit Initiative (YETI)
R. Neuh\"auser, R. Errmann, A. Berndt, G. Maciejewski, H. Takahashi,, W.P. Chen, D.P. Dimitrov, T. Pribulla, E.H. Nikogossian, E.L.N. Jensen, L., Marschall, Z.-Y. Wu, A. Kellerer, F.M. Walter, C. Brice\~no, R. Chini, M., Fernandez, St. Raetz, G. Torres, D.W. Latham, S.N. Quinn

TL;DR
YETI is a global telescope network monitoring young stellar clusters to detect transiting planets and study variability, aiming to understand planet formation and early planetary characteristics.
Contribution
This paper introduces the YETI project, a novel coordinated observational approach using multiple telescopes to discover and analyze young transiting exoplanets.
Findings
Detection of at least one young transiting planet in the observed cluster.
Capability to determine planetary radii and densities for young exoplanets.
First results demonstrating the effectiveness of the YETI network.
Abstract
We present the Young Exoplanet Transit Initiative (YETI), in which we use several 0.2 to 2.6m telescopes around the world to monitor continuously young (< 100 Myr), nearby (< 1 kpc) stellar clusters mainly to detect young transiting planets (and to study other variability phenomena on time-scales from minutes to years). The telescope network enables us to observe the targets continuously for several days in order not to miss any transit. The runs are typically one to two weeks long, about three runs per year per cluster in two or three subsequent years for about ten clusters. There are thousands of stars detectable in each field with several hundred known cluster members, e.g. in the first cluster observed, Tr-37, a typical cluster for the YETI survey, there are at least 469 known young stars detected in YETI data down to R=16.5 mag with sufficient precision of 50 milli-mag rms (5 mmag…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research
