Follow-up of non-transiting planets detected by Kepler. Confirmation of three hot-Jupiters and validation of three other planets
J. Lillo-Box, S. Millholland, G. Laughlin

TL;DR
This study confirms three hot-Jupiters and validates a new method for detecting non-transiting planets through phase curve variations using ground-based follow-up observations.
Contribution
It demonstrates the first validation of non-transiting planet detection via phase curve variations with ground-based radial velocity measurements.
Findings
Confirmed three new hot-Jupiters with radial velocity measurements.
Set mass constraints for three other planet candidates, suggesting they are planetary.
Validated the phase curve variation technique as a reliable method for detecting non-transiting planets.
Abstract
The direct detection of new extrasolar planets from high-precision photometry data is commonly based on the observation of the transit signal of the planet as it passes in front of its star. Close-in planets, however, leave additional imprints in the light curve even if they do not transit. These are the so-called phase curve variations that include ellipsoidal, reflection and beaming effects. In Millholland & Laughlin (2017), the authors scrutinized the Kepler database looking for these phase variations from non-transiting planets. They found 60 candidates whose signals were compatible with planetary companions. In this paper, we perform a ground-based follow-up of a sub-sample of these systems with the aim of confirming and characterizing these planets and thus validating the detection technique. We used the CAFE and HERMES instruments to monitor the radial velocity of ten…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
