Toward Direct Detection of Hot Jupiters with Precision Closure Phase: Calibration Studies and First Results from the CHARA Array
M. Zhao (1), J. D. Monnier (2), X. Che (2), E. Pedretti (3), N., Thureau (3), G. Schaefer (4), T. ten Brummelaar (4), A. Merand (5), S. T., Ridgway (6), H. McAlister (4), N. Turner (4), J. Sturmann (4), L. Sturmann, (4), P. J. Goldfinger (4)

TL;DR
This study explores the use of precision closure phase measurements with the CHARA array to directly detect thermal emission from hot Jupiters, demonstrating feasibility and identifying systematic challenges and solutions.
Contribution
It presents the first closure phase calibration studies and results for hot Jupiter detection, highlighting the potential and limitations of current interferometric methods.
Findings
Closure phase method is feasible with high stability.
Systematic errors are larger than expected, likely due to dispersion.
Higher spectral resolution reduces systematics and improves calibration.
Abstract
Direct detection of thermal emission from nearby hot Jupiters has greatly advanced our knowledge of extrasolar planets in recent years. Since hot Jupiter systems can be regarded as analogs of high contrast binaries, ground-based infrared long baseline interferometers have the potential to resolve them and detect their thermal emission with precision closure phase - a method that is immune to the systematic errors induced by the Earth's atmosphere. In this work, we present closure phase studies toward direct detection of nearby hot Jupiters using the CHARA interferometer array outfitted with the MIRC instrument. We carry out closure phase simulations and conduct a large number of observations for the best candidate {\upsion} And. Our experiments suggest the method is feasible with highly stable and precise closure phases. However, we also find much larger systematic errors than expected…
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.
