Spectroscopic direct detection of reflected light from extra-solar planets
Jorge H. C. Martins, Pedro Figueira, Nuno Santos, Christophe Lovis

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new spectroscopic method using cross-correlation to directly detect reflected light from exoplanets, demonstrating its feasibility with simulations for current and upcoming telescopes.
Contribution
It introduces an alternative approach employing cross-correlation functions for detecting exoplanet reflected light, showing it can work with existing instruments and simulations.
Findings
Detection significance above 3 sigma in simulated data
Feasibility of detecting reflected light with current telescopes
Potential for future observations with next-generation telescopes
Abstract
At optical wavelengths, an exoplanet's signature is essentially reflected light from the host star - several orders of magnitude fainter. Since it is superimposed on the star spectrum its detection has been a difficult observational challenge. However, the development of a new generation of instruments like ESPRESSO and next generation telescopes like the E-ELT put us in a privileged position to detect these planets' reflected light as we will have access to extremely high signal-to-noise ratio spectra. With this work, we propose an alternative approach for the direct detection of the reflected light of an exoplanet. We simulated observations with ESPRESSO@VLT and HIRES@E-ELT of several star+planet systems, encompassing 10h of the most favourable orbital phases. To the simulated spectra we applied the Cross Correlation Function to operate in a much higher signal-to-noise ratio domain…
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