TL;DR
This study analyzed 19 years of photometric data of the young star J1407 to search for additional transiting substellar companions, finding no evidence of such transits above a certain size threshold.
Contribution
The paper presents a comprehensive analysis combining long-term photometry and transit search techniques to constrain the presence of transiting companions around J1407.
Findings
No additional transiting companions detected.
Sensitivity to transits larger than approximately 1 Jupiter radius.
Confirmed the star's activity cycle and rotational modulation.
Abstract
In 2007, the young star 1SWASP J140747.93-394542.6 (V1400 Cen) underwent a complex series of deep eclipses over 56 days. This was attributed to the transit of a ring system filling a large fraction of the Hill sphere of an unseen substellar companion. Subsequent photometric monitoring has not found any other deep transits from this candidate ring system, but if there are more substellar companions and they are coplanar with the potential ring system, there is a chance that they will transit the star as well. This young star is active and the light curves show a 5% modulation in amplitude with a dominant rotation period of 3.2 days due to star spots rotating in and out of view. We model and remove the rotational modulation of the J1407 light curve and search for additional transit signatures of substellar companions orbiting around J1407. We combine the photometry of J1407 from several…
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