Search for light curve modulations among Kepler candidates. Three very low-mass transiting companions
J. Lillo-Box, A. Ribas, D. Barrado, B. Mer\'in, H. Bouy

TL;DR
This study uses light curve modulations in Kepler data to identify and characterize very low-mass transiting companions, distinguishing them from planets and providing insights into their nature and formation.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed mathematical framework for modeling REB modulations in eccentric orbits and applies it to identify three very low-mass companions, including brown dwarfs.
Findings
Identified three close-in very low-mass companions, including brown dwarfs.
Rejected planetary nature for the transiting objects, classifying them as false positives.
Provided constraints on the internal structure and formation of low-mass companions.
Abstract
Light curve modulations in the sample of Kepler planet candidates allows the disentangling of the nature of the transiting object by photometrically measuring its mass. This is possible by detecting the effects of the gravitational pull of the companion (ellipsoidal modulations) and in some cases, the photometric imprints of the Doppler effect when observing in a broad band (Doppler beaming). We aim to photometrically unveil the nature of some transiting objects showing clear modulations in the phase-folded Kepler light curve. We selected a subsample among the large crop of Kepler objects of interest (KOIs) based on their chances to show detectable light curve modulations, i.e., close () and large (in terms of radius) candidates. We modeled their phase-folded light curves with consistent equations for the three effects, namely, reflection, ellipsoidal and beaming (known…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science
