Extrasolar Planets Orbiting Active Stars
J\"org Weingrill

TL;DR
This paper reviews how stellar activity impacts the detection of transiting extrasolar planets, discusses detection methods, and analyzes stellar activity effects in the CoRoT dataset, highlighting challenges for discovering small planets.
Contribution
It introduces methods to detect transit signals amidst stellar activity and provides a statistical overview of stellar activity effects in the CoRoT dataset.
Findings
Stellar activity can obscure small planet transits.
Analysis of CoRoT data shows activity impacts detection success.
Future missions need long-term, high-precision observations.
Abstract
New discoveries of transiting extrasolar planets are reported weekly. Ground based surveys as well as space borne observatories like CoRoT and Kepler are responsible for filling the statistical voids of planets on distant stellar systems. I want to discuss the stellar activity and its impact on the discovery of extrasolar planets. Up to now the discovery of small rocky planets called "Super-Earths" like CoRoT-7b and Kepler-10b are the only exceptions. The question arises, why among over 500 detected and verified planets the amount of smaller planets is strikingly low. An explanation besides that the verification of small planets is an intriguing task, is the high level of stellar activity that has been observed. Stellar activity can be observed at different time-scales from long term irradiance variations similar to the well known solar cycle, over stellar rotation in the regime of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Scientific Research and Discoveries
