The effect of stellar limb darkening values on the accuracy of the planet radii derived from photometric transit observations
Sz. Csizmadia, Th. Pasternacki, C. Dreyer, J. Cabrera, A. Erikson, H., Rauer

TL;DR
This study examines how uncertainties in stellar limb darkening affect the accuracy of exoplanet radius measurements from transit data, highlighting the importance of fitting limb darkening coefficients rather than fixing them.
Contribution
It demonstrates that fixing limb darkening coefficients based on theoretical tables limits accuracy, whereas fitting them yields more precise exoplanet radius estimates despite stellar spots.
Findings
Fixing limb darkening coefficients leads to 1-20% errors in radius estimates.
Fitting limb darkening coefficients achieves <1% accuracy in key parameters.
Stellar spots impact limb darkening fits but not the precision of radius determination.
Abstract
We study how the precision of the exoplanet radius determination is affected by our present knowledge of limb darkening in two cases: when we fix the limb darkening coefficients and when we adjust them. We also investigate the effects of spots in one-colour photometry. We study the effect of limb darkening on the planetary radius determination both via analytical expressions and by numerical experiments. We also compare some of the existing limb darkening tables. When stellar spots affect the fit, we replace the limb darkening coefficients, calculated for the unspotted cases, with effective limb darkening coefficients to describe the effect of the spots. There are two important cases. (1) When one fixes the limb darkening values according to some theoretical predictions, the inconsistencies of the tables do not allow us to reach accuracy in the planetary radius of better than 1-10%…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
