# AutoRegressive Planet Search: Methodology

**Authors:** Gabriel A. Caceres, Eric D. Feigelson, G. Jogesh Babu, Natalia, Bahamonde, Alejandra Christen, Karine Bertin, Cristian Meza, Michel Cur\'e

arXiv: 1901.05116 · 2019-07-24

## TL;DR

The paper introduces ARPS, a novel methodology combining ARIMA models and a transit detection algorithm to improve exoplanet transit identification amidst stellar variability.

## Contribution

It presents a new time series analysis framework using ARIMA and a matched-filter algorithm, Transit Comb Filter, for enhanced exoplanet detection.

## Key findings

- Effective detection of planetary transits in variable stellar light curves.
- High fidelity candidate identification using Random Forest classifiers.
- Applicable to both space-based and ground-based photometric data.

## Abstract

The detection of periodic signals from transiting exoplanets is often impeded by extraneous aperiodic photometric variability, either intrinsic to the star or arising from the measurement process. Frequently, these variations are autocorrelated wherein later flux values are correlated with previous ones. In this work, we present the methodology of the Autoregessive Planet Search (ARPS) project which uses Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average (ARIMA) and related statistical models that treat a wide variety of stochastic processes, as well as nonstationarity, to improve detection of new planetary transits. Providing a time series is evenly spaced or can be placed on an evenly spaced grid with missing values, these low-dimensional parametric models can prove very effective. We introduce a planet-search algorithm to detect periodic transits in the residuals after the application of ARIMA models. Our matched-filter algorithm, the Transit Comb Filter (TCF), is closely related to the traditional Box-fitting Least Squares and provides an analogous periodogram. Finally, if a previously identified or simulated sample of planets is available, selected scalar features from different stages of the analysis -- the original light curves, ARIMA fits, TCF periodograms, and folded light curves -- can be collectively used with a multivariate classifier to identify promising candidates while efficiently rejecting false alarms. We use Random Forests for this task, in conjunction with Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves, to define discovery criteria for new, high fidelity planetary candidates. The ARPS methodology can be applied to both evenly spaced satellite light curves and densely cadenced ground-based photometric surveys.

## Full text

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## Figures

14 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.05116/full.md

## References

124 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.05116/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.05116