High-resolution imaging of $Kepler$ planet host candidates. A comprehensive comparison of different techniques
J. Lillo-Box, D. Barrado, H. Bouy

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution imaging techniques to identify close companions of Kepler planet candidates, assessing their isolation status and potential false positives, thereby aiding in prioritizing candidates for confirmation.
Contribution
It introduces the BSC parameter for evaluating blended sources and compares lucky imaging with other high-resolution techniques for Kepler candidates.
Findings
67.2% of Kepler hosts are isolated within detection limits
32.8% have at least one close visual companion
Three candidates identified as possible false positives
Abstract
The Kepler mission has discovered thousands of planet candidates. Currently, some of them have already been discarded; more than 200 have been confirmed by follow-up observations, and several hundreds have been validated. However, most of them are still awaiting for confirmation. Thus, priorities (in terms of the probability of the candidate being a real planet) must be established for subsequent observations. The motivation of this work is to provide a set of isolated (good) host candidates to be further tested by other techniques. We identify close companions of the candidates that could have contaminated the light curve of the planet host. We used the AstraLux North instrument located at the 2.2 m telescope in the Calar Alto Observatory to obtain diffraction-limited images of 174 Kepler objects of interest. The lucky-imaging technique used in this work is compared to other AO and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
