Three New Eclipsing White-dwarf - M-dwarf Binaries Discovered in a Search for Transiting Planets Around M-dwarfs
Nicholas M. Law, Adam L. Kraus, Rachel Street, Benjamin J. Fulton,, Lynne A. Hillenbrand, Avi Shporer, Tim Lister, Christoph Baranec, Joshua S., Bloom, Khanh Bui, Mahesh P. Burse, S. Bradley Cenko, H. K. Das, Jack. T. C., Davis, Richard G. Dekany, Alexei V. Filippenko

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of three eclipsing white-dwarf/M-dwarf binaries, introduces a GPU-accelerated transit search algorithm, and discusses their implications as false positives in planet detection around M-dwarfs.
Contribution
The study presents three new binary systems, a GPU-based transit search method, and analysis techniques to distinguish binaries from planetary transits.
Findings
Discovered three short-period white-dwarf/M-dwarf binaries.
Developed an 8X faster GPU-based transit search algorithm.
Identified these binaries as potential false positives in planet searches.
Abstract
We present three new eclipsing white-dwarf / M-dwarf binary systems discovered during a search for transiting planets around M-dwarfs. Unlike most known eclipsing systems of this type, the optical and infrared emission is dominated by the M-dwarf components, and the systems have optical colors and discovery light curves consistent with being Jupiter-radius transiting planets around early M-dwarfs. We detail the PTF/M-dwarf transiting planet survey, part of the Palomar Transient Factory (PTF). We present a Graphics Processing Unit (GPU)-based box-least-squares search for transits that runs approximately 8X faster than similar algorithms implemented on general purpose systems. For the discovered systems, we decompose low-resolution spectra of the systems into white-dwarf and M-dwarf components, and use radial velocity measurements and cooling models to estimate masses and radii for the…
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