Extreme precision photometry from the ground with beam-shaping diffusers for K2, TESS and beyond
Gudmundur Stefansson, Suvrath Mahadevan, John Wisniewski, Yiting Li,, Marissa Maney, Leslie Hebb, Brett Morris, Samuel Halverson, Andrew Monson,, Paul Robertson

TL;DR
This paper discusses the use of beam-shaping diffusers to achieve high-precision ground-based photometry for exoplanet follow-up, introduces a tool for planning such observations, and demonstrates their effectiveness in TESS follow-up.
Contribution
It provides detailed guidelines for sizing diffusers, introduces the open-source iDiffuse tool for predicting photometric precision, and applies this to TESS exoplanet host stars.
Findings
Most TESS planet hosts are scintillation limited from the ground.
Beam-shaping diffusers significantly improve photometric stability.
The iDiffuse tool can be adapted to various telescopes for planning observations.
Abstract
The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS, launched early 2018) is expected to find a multitude of new transiting planet candidates around the nearest and brightest stars. Timely high-precision follow-up observations from the ground are essential in confirming and further characterizing the planet candidates that TESS will find. However, achieving extreme photometric precisions from the ground is challenging, as ground-based telescopes are subject to numerous deleterious atmospheric effects. Beam-shaping diffusers are emerging as a low-cost technology to achieve hitherto unachievable differential photometric precisions from the ground. These diffusers mold the focal plane image of a star into a broad and stable top-hat shape, minimizing photometric errors due to non-uniform pixel response, atmospheric seeing effects, imperfect guiding, and telescope-induced variable aberrations…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
