ASTEP South: a first photometric analysis
N. Crouzet, T. Guillot, D. M\'ekarnia, J. Szul\'agyi, L. Abe, A., Agabi, Y. Fante\"i-Caujolle, I. Gon\c{c}alves, M. Barbieri, F.-X. Schmider,, J.-P. Rivet, E. Bondoux, Z. Challita, C. Pouzenc, F. Fressin, F. Valbousquet,, A. Blazit, S. Bonhomme, J.-B. Daban, C. Gouvret

TL;DR
The ASTEP South project demonstrates the potential of Dome C, Antarctica, for high-precision, continuous photometric observations, detecting an eclipsing binary and showcasing the site’s suitability for exoplanet detection.
Contribution
First photometric analysis from Dome C using ASTEP South, showing the site’s capability for precise, continuous observations and planet detection potential.
Findings
Detected a 9.9-day eclipsing binary with high precision
Achieved sub-millimagnitude folded lightcurve after data processing
Confirmed Dome C's suitability for long-period exoplanet observations
Abstract
The ASTEP project aims at detecting and characterizing transiting planets from Dome C, Antarctica, and qualifying this site for photometry in the visible. The first phase of the project, ASTEP South, is a fixed 10 cm diameter instrument pointing continuously towards the celestial South pole. Observations were made almost continuously during 4 winters, from 2008 to 2011. The point-to-point RMS of 1-day photometric lightcurves can be explained by a combination of expected statistical noises, dominated by the photon noise up to magnitude 14. This RMS is large, from 2.5 mmag at R=8 to 6% at R=14, because of the small size of ASTEP South and the short exposure time (30 s). Statistical noises should be considerably reduced using the large amount of collected data. A 9.9-day period eclipsing binary is detected, with a magnitude R=9.85. The 2-season lightcurve folded in phase and binned into…
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