Atmospheric Scintillation Noise in Ground-Based Exoplanet Photometry
D. F\"ohring, R. W. Wilson, J. Osborn, V. S. Dhillon

TL;DR
This paper investigates atmospheric scintillation noise in ground-based exoplanet photometry, demonstrating how turbulence profiling can model and mitigate this noise to improve measurement accuracy.
Contribution
It shows the correlation between turbulence profiling and scintillation noise, and identifies conditions where scintillation correction significantly enhances exoplanet parameter measurements.
Findings
Scintillation dominates for bright targets above V~10.1 mag with 0.5m telescopes.
Turbulence profiling can accurately model scintillation noise.
Scintillation correction improves exoplanet parameter uncertainties.
Abstract
Atmospheric scintillation caused by optical turbulence in the Earth's atmosphere can be the dominant source of noise in ground-based photometric observations of bright targets, which is a particular concern for ground-based exoplanet transit photometry. We demonstrate the implications of atmospheric scintillation for exoplanet transit photometry through contemporaneous turbulence profiling and transit observations. We find a strong correlation between measured intensity variations and scintillation determined through optical turbulence profiling. This correlation indicates that turbulence profiling can be used to accurately model the amount of scintillation noise present in photometric observations on another telescope at the same site. We examine the conditions under which scintillation correction would be beneficial for transit photometry through turbulence profiling, and find that…
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