Evidence for a spectroscopic direct detection of reflected light from 51 Peg b
J. H. C. Martins, N. C. Santos, P. Figueira, J. P. Faria, M. Montalto,, I. Boisse, D. Ehrenreich, C. Lovis, M. Mayor, C. Melo, F. Pepe, S. G. Sousa,, S. Udry, D. Cunha

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a spectroscopic method to directly detect reflected light from exoplanet 51 Peg b, enabling measurement of its mass, orbital inclination, and albedo using high-resolution spectra.
Contribution
The authors develop and apply a novel cross-correlation technique to detect reflected light from an exoplanet, achieving a 3-sigma detection and inferring key planetary properties.
Findings
Detected reflected light from 51 Peg b at 3σ significance.
Inferred a planetary mass of approximately 0.46 Jupiter masses.
Suggested the planet may be an inflated hot Jupiter with high albedo.
Abstract
The detection of reflected light from an exoplanet is a difficult technical challenge at optical wavelengths. Even though this signal is expected to replicate the stellar signal, not only is it several orders of magnitude fainter, but it is also hidden among the stellar noise. We apply a variant of the cross-correlation technique to HARPS observations of 51 Peg to detect the reflected signal from planet 51 Peg b. Our method makes use of the cross-correlation function of a binary mask with high-resolution spectra to amplify the minute planetary signal that is present in the spectra by a factor proportional to the number of spectral lines when performing the cross correlation. The resulting cross-correlation functions are then normalized by a stellar template to remove the stellar signal. Carefully selected sections of the resulting normalized CCFs are stacked to increase the planetary…
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