TL;DR
This paper proposes a method to accurately measure exoplanet radii by analyzing ingress and egress durations, accounting for starspot contamination, and demonstrates its effectiveness with synthetic and real data.
Contribution
It introduces a reparameterization of transit light curves to separate radius ratio from contamination effects, improving radius estimates for spotted stars.
Findings
Ingress/egress duration measurement recovers true radii with known limb-darkening.
Analysis of Kepler and Spitzer data shows no strong spot contamination evidence.
Potential to improve radius accuracy with future JWST observations.
Abstract
We typically measure the radii of transiting exoplanets from the transit depth, which is given by the ratio of cross-sectional areas of the planet and star. However, if a star has dark starspots (or bright regions) distributed throughout the transit chord, the transit depth will be biased towards smaller (larger) values, and thus the inferred planet radius will be smaller (larger) if unaccounted for. We reparameterize the transit light curve to account for "self-contamination" by photospheric inhomogeneities by splitting the parameter into two parameters: one for the radius ratio -- which controls the duration of ingress and egress -- and another which measures the possibly contaminated transit depth. We show that this is equivalent to the formulation for contamination by a second star (with positive or negative flux), and that it is sensitive to time-steady inhomogeneity…
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