Multiplicity in transiting planet host stars. A Lucky Imaging study of Kepler candidates
J. Lillo-Box, D. Barrado, H. Bouy

TL;DR
This study uses Lucky Imaging to detect close stellar companions around Kepler planet candidates, revealing a significant rate of multiplicity that impacts planet characterization and validation.
Contribution
First application of Lucky Imaging to a large sample of Kepler candidates, providing high-resolution data on stellar companions and their influence on exoplanet detection.
Findings
58.2% of hosts lack nearby objects within 6 arcsec
19 companions found within 3 arcsec of 17 KOIs
8 companions could be physically bound to host stars
Abstract
In the exoplanetary era, the Kepler spacecraft is causing a revolution by discovering thousands of new planet candidates. However, a follow up program is needed in order to reject false candidates and to fully characterize the bona-fide exoplanets. Our main aims are: 1./ Detect and analyze close companions inside the typical Kepler PSF to study if they are the responsible of the dim in the Kepler light curves, 2./ Study the change in the stellar and planetary parameters due to the presence of an unresolved object, 3./ Help to validate those Kepler Objects of Interest that do not present any object inside the Kepler PSF and 4./ Study the multiplicity rate in planet host candidates. Such a large sample of observed planet host candidates allows us to do statistics about the presence of close (visual or bounded) companions to the harboring star. We present here Lucky Imaging observations…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
