TEE, a simple estimator for the precision of eclipse and transit minimum times
Hans J. Deeg (IAC), Brandon Tingley (Aarhus U.)

TL;DR
The paper introduces TEE, a simple equation to estimate the precision of eclipse and transit timing measurements using basic parameters, aiding future exoplanet observations and instrument design.
Contribution
It presents the TEE equation for estimating transit timing errors, validated through simulations, and discusses implications for observational strategies and instrument sampling requirements.
Findings
TEE provides accurate timing error estimates when sampling is faster than ingress/egress durations.
Timing errors increase significantly for low S/N transits near detection limits.
Sampling faster than ingress/egress durations is crucial for accurate timing measurements.
Abstract
Context: Transit or eclipse timing variations have proven to be a valuable tool in exoplanet research. However, no simple way to estimate the potential precision of such timing measures has been presented yet, nor are guidelines available regarding the relation between timing errors and sampling rate. Aims: A `timing error estimator' (TEE) equation is presented that requires only basic transit parameters as input. With the TEE, it is straightforward to estimate timing precisions both for actual data as well as for future instruments, such as the TESS and PLATO space missions. Methods: A derivation of the timing error based on a trapezoidal transit shape is given. We also verify the TEE on realistically modeled transits using Monte Carlo simulations and determine its validity range, exploring in particular the interplay between ingress/egress times and sampling rates. Results: The…
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