The TESS-Keck Survey: Science Goals and Target Selection
Ashley Chontos, Joseph M. Akana Murphy, Mason G. MacDougall, Tara, Fetherolf, Judah Van Zandt, Ryan A. Rubenzahl, Corey Beard, Daniel Huber,, Natalie M. Batalha, Ian J. M. Crossfield, Courtney D. Dressing, Benjamin, Fulton, Andrew W. Howard, Howard Isaacson, Stephen R. Kane

TL;DR
The TESS-Keck Survey (TKS) uses ground-based RV observations to characterize exoplanets discovered by TESS, focusing on their compositions, system architectures, and potential for atmospheric study, with a fully-automated target selection process.
Contribution
Introduction of a fully-automated target selection algorithm for the TESS-Keck Survey, enabling efficient identification of exoplanet candidates for detailed follow-up.
Findings
103 planets in 86 systems identified for study
Most hosts are inactive, solar-like stars with diverse metallicities
Sample includes small planets, multi-planet systems, and habitable zone candidates
Abstract
Space-based transit missions such as Kepler and TESS have demonstrated that planets are ubiquitous. However, the success of these missions heavily depends on ground-based radial velocity (RV) surveys, which combined with transit photometry can yield bulk densities and orbital properties. While most Kepler host stars are too faint for detailed follow-up observations, TESS is detecting planets orbiting nearby bright stars that are more amenable to RV characterization. Here we introduce the TESS-Keck Survey (TKS), an RV program using ~100 nights on Keck/HIRES to study exoplanets identified by TESS. The primary survey aims are investigating the link between stellar properties and the compositions of small planets; studying how the diversity of system architectures depends on dynamical configurations or planet multiplicity; identifying prime candidates for atmospheric studies with JWST; and…
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