First limits on the occurrence rate of short-period planets orbiting brown dwarfs
Matthias Y. He, Amaury H. M. J. Triaud, Micha\"el Gillon

TL;DR
This study used archival Spitzer data to search for short-period planets around brown dwarfs, setting the first upper limits on their occurrence rates and informing future observational strategies.
Contribution
First to establish upper limits on the occurrence rate of close-in terrestrial planets orbiting brown dwarfs using archival space telescope data.
Findings
No unambiguous planetary signals detected.
Set an upper limit of 67% on planet occurrence within 1.28 days for 0.75-3.25 R⊕ planets.
Estimated 175 brown dwarfs need monitoring to detect one planet at 95% confidence.
Abstract
Planet formation theories predict a large but still undetected population of short-period terrestrial planets orbiting brown dwarfs. Should specimens of this population be discovered transiting relatively bright and nearby brown dwarfs, the Jupiter-size and the low luminosity of their hosts would make them exquisite targets for detailed atmospheric characterisation with JWST and future ground-based facilities. The eventual discovery and detailed study of a significant sample of transiting terrestrial planets orbiting nearby brown dwarfs could prove to be useful not only for comparative exoplanetology but also for astrobiology, by bringing us key information on the physical requirements and timescale for the emergence of life. In this context, we present a search for transit-signals in archival time-series photometry acquired by the Spitzer Space Telescope for a sample of 44 nearby…
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