Transit Detection in the MEarth Survey of Nearby M Dwarfs: Bridging the Clean-First, Search-Later Divide
Zachory K. Berta, Jonathan Irwin, David Charbonneau, Christopher J., Burke, Emilio E. Falco

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new semi-Bayesian framework, MISS MarPLE, for detecting shallow exoplanet transits in irregular, noisy light curves from ground-based surveys, improving robustness over traditional methods.
Contribution
The paper presents MISS MarPLE, a novel method that models variability and systematics simultaneously, enhancing transit detection accuracy in challenging ground-based photometric data.
Findings
MISS MarPLE effectively models stellar variability and systematics.
The method improves false alarm probability assessment.
Application to MEarth data demonstrates robustness in real observations.
Abstract
In the effort to characterize the masses, radii, and atmospheres of potentially habitable exoplanets, there is an urgent need to find examples of such planets transiting nearby M dwarfs. The MEarth Project is an ongoing effort to do so, as a ground-based photometric survey designed to detect exoplanets as small as 2 Earth radii transiting mid-to-late M dwarfs within 33 pc of the Sun. Unfortunately, identifying transits of such planets in photometric monitoring is complicated both by the intrinsic stellar variability that is common among these stars and by the nocturnal cadence, atmospheric variations, and instrumental systematics that often plague Earth-bound observatories. Here we summarize the properties of MEarth data gathered so far, and we present a new framework to detect shallow exoplanet transits in wiggly and irregularly-spaced light curves. In contrast to previous methods that…
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