Orbital Period Refinement of CoRoT Planets with TESS Observations
Peter Klagyivik, Hans J. Deeg, Szilard Csizmadia, Juan Cabrera and, Grzegorz Nowak

TL;DR
This study refines the orbital periods of nine CoRoT exoplanets using TESS data, enabling precise future transit predictions and aiding ongoing exoplanet research.
Contribution
It provides updated ephemerides for nine CoRoT planets, recovering lost transits and improving transit prediction accuracy for future observations.
Findings
Transits for nine CoRoT planets were re-identified with TESS data.
Updated ephemerides allow transit predictions with less than 30-minute uncertainty until 2030.
No significant transit timing variations were detected in these systems.
Abstract
CoRoT was the first space mission dedicated to exoplanet detection. Operational between 2007 and 2012, this mission discovered 37 transiting planets, including CoRoT-7b, the first terrestrial exoplanet with a measured size. The precision of the published transit ephemeris of most of these planets has been limited by the relative short durations of the CoRoT pointings, which implied a danger that the transits will become unobservable within a few years due to the uncertainty of their future transit epochs. Ground-based follow-up observations of the majority of the CoRoT planets have been published in recent years. Between Dec. 2018 and Jan. 2021, the TESS mission in its sectors 6 and 33 re-observed those CoRoT fields that pointed towards the Galactic anti-center. These data permitted the identification of transits from nine of the CoRoT planets, and the derivation of precise new transit…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
