The Spitzer search for the transits of HARPS low-mass planets - II. Null results for 19 planets
M. Gillon (1), B.-O. Demory (2,3), C. Lovis (4), D. Deming (5), D., Ehrenreich (4), G. Lo Curto (6), M. Mayor (4), F. Pepe (4), D. Queloz (3,4),, S. Seager (7), D. Segransan (4), S. Udry (4) ((1) University of Liege, (2), University of Bern, (3) University of Cambridge

TL;DR
This study used the Spitzer Space Telescope to search for transits of 19 low-mass exoplanets detected by radial velocity, finding no transits and demonstrating Spitzer's high photometric precision for such detections.
Contribution
First comprehensive null-result survey of low-mass planets' transits using Spitzer, establishing constraints on their transiting nature and demonstrating the instrument's capabilities.
Findings
83% probability that none of the 19 planets transit
Achieved better than 50ppm photometric precision for most targets
Confirmed or discovered transits for 3 out of 25 targeted planets
Abstract
Short-period super-Earths and Neptunes are now known to be very frequent around solar-type stars. Improving our understanding of these mysterious planets requires the detection of a significant sample of objects suitable for detailed characterization. Searching for the transits of the low-mass planets detected by Doppler surveys is a straightforward way to achieve this goal. Indeed, Doppler surveys target the most nearby main-sequence stars, they regularly detect close-in low-mass planets with significant transit probability, and their radial velocity data constrain strongly the ephemeris of possible transits. In this context, we initiated in 2010 an ambitious Spitzer multi-Cycle transit search project that targeted 25 low-mass planets detected by radial velocity, focusing mainly on the shortest-period planets detected by the HARPS spectrograph. We report here null results for 19…
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