No Conclusive Evidence for Transits of Proxima b in MOST photometry
David M. Kipping, Chris Cameron, Joel D. Hartman, James R. A., Davenport, Jaymie M. Matthews, Dimitar Sasselov, Jason Rowe, Robert J., Siverd, Jingjing Chen, Emily Sandford, G\'asp\'ar \'A. Bakos, Andres Jordan,, Daniel Bayliss, Thomas Henning, Luigi Mancini, Kaloyan Penev

TL;DR
This study used space-based photometry to search for transits of Proxima b but found no conclusive evidence, highlighting the challenges posed by stellar flares and the need for infrared follow-up.
Contribution
First detailed photometric analysis of Proxima Centauri for transits of Proxima b, demonstrating the difficulty of detecting transits amidst stellar activity.
Findings
No compelling transit detection was made.
Candidate signals are likely false positives due to stellar flares.
Infrared follow-up is recommended for conclusive results.
Abstract
The analysis of Proxima Centauri's radial velocities recently led Anglada-Escud\'e et al. (2016) to claim the presence of a low mass planet orbiting the Sun's nearest star once every 11.2 days. Although the a-priori probability that Proxima b transits its parent star is just 1.5%, the potential impact of such a discovery would be considerable. Independent of recent radial velocity efforts, we observed Proxima Centauri for 12.5 days in 2014 and 31 days in 2015 with the MOST space telescope. We report here that we cannot make a compelling case that Proxima b transits in our precise photometric time series. Imposing an informative prior on the period and phase, we do detect a candidate signal with the expected depth. However, perturbing the phase prior across 100 evenly spaced intervals reveals one strong false-positive and one weaker instance. We estimate a false-positive rate of at least…
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