Measuring stellar granulation during planet transits
A. Chiavassa, A. Caldas, F. Selsis, J. Leconte, P. Von Paris, P., Bord\'e, Z. Magic, R. Collet, M. Asplund

TL;DR
This study models stellar surface granulation effects during planet transits using 3D simulations, revealing significant impact on transit light curves and planet radius measurements, emphasizing the need to account for stellar variability.
Contribution
It introduces a method employing 3D radiative hydrodynamical simulations to quantify granulation noise during exoplanet transits, improving accuracy in planet characterization.
Findings
Granulation affects transit light curve depth.
Granulation noise correlates across wavelengths.
Stellar variability introduces uncertainty in planet measurements.
Abstract
Stellar activity and convection-related surface structures might cause bias in planet detection and characterization that use these transits. Surface convection simulations help to quantify the granulation signal. We used realistic three-dimensional radiative hydrodynamical simulations from the Stagger grid and synthetic images computed with the radiative transfer code Optim3D to model the transits of three prototype planets: a hot Jupiter, a hot Neptune, and a terrestrial planet. We computed intensity maps from RHD simulations of the Sun and a K-dwarf star at different wavelength bands from optical to far-infrared. We modeled the transit using synthetic stellar-disk images and emulated the temporal variation of the granulation intensity. We identified two types of granulation noise that act simultaneously during the planet transit: (i) the intrinsic change in the granulation pattern…
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