Planets Transiting Non-Eclipsing Binaries
David V. Martin, Amaury H.M.J. Triaud

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential existence and detection of transiting planets around non-eclipsing binary stars, using simulations to understand their properties and implications for planet formation theories.
Contribution
It introduces a method to identify transiting circumbinary planets around non-eclipsing binaries and analyzes their potential frequency and characteristics through synthetic system simulations.
Findings
Transiting non-eclipsing circumbinary planets likely exist in Kepler data.
Observational biases cannot fully explain the over-density of planets near the stability limit.
Gas giant distributions differ between single and binary star systems.
Abstract
The majority of binary stars do not eclipse. Current searches for transiting circumbinary planets concentrate on eclipsing binaries, and are therefore restricted to a small fraction of potential hosts. We investigate the concept of finding planets transiting non-eclipsing binaries, whose geometry would require mutually inclined planes. Using an N-body code we explore how the number and sequence of transits vary as functions of observing time and orbital parameters. The concept is then generalised thanks to a suite of simulated circumbinary systems. Binaries are constructed from RV surveys of the solar neighbourhood. They are then populated with orbiting gas giants, drawn from a range of distributions. The binary population is shown to be compatible with the Kepler eclipsing binary catalogue, indicating that the properties of binaries may be as universal as the initial mass function.…
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