Development and Application of Tools to Characterize Transiting Astrophysical Systems
Bence B\'eky

TL;DR
This paper develops and applies photometric tools to characterize transiting astrophysical systems, including exoplanets and stellar phenomena, demonstrating methods for discovery, spectroscopy, and surface mapping across different scales.
Contribution
It introduces novel applications of transit photometry for exoplanet characterization, reflection spectroscopy, and starspot mapping, extending techniques to diverse astrophysical systems.
Findings
Transit methods constrain planetary mass, radius, and inclination.
Reflection spectroscopy detects faint planetary light.
Starspot mapping reveals stellar rotation and spot properties.
Abstract
Since the discovery of the first exoplanets more than 20 years ago, there has been an increasing need for photometric and spectroscopic models to characterize these systems. While imaging has been used extensively for Solar System bodies and extended objects like galaxies, the small angular extent of typical planetary systems makes it difficult or impossible to resolve them. Spatially integrated observations like measuring the total brightness or spectrum, however, can be conducted at a resonable cost. This thesis focuses on photometric models in the context of transiting systems, which exhibit a number of phenomena that can be exploited for characterization. First, we showcase the popular methods of transiting exoplanet discovery and characterization by ground based observations on the hot Jupiter HAT-P-27b. We demonstrate how transits allow us to constrain planetary mass, radius,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsScientific Research and Discoveries · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
