TESS search for substellar companions through pulsation timing of $\delta$ Scuti stars. I. Discovery of companions around Chang 134 and V393 Car
V. Vaulato, V. Nascimbeni, G. Piotto

TL;DR
This study explores the use of pulsation timing with TESS data to detect substellar companions around extit{delta} Scuti stars, successfully identifying candidates around two stars and discussing the method's potential and limitations.
Contribution
It demonstrates the feasibility of using TESS data for pulsation timing to discover substellar companions around extit{delta} Scuti stars, a novel application expanding the method's scope.
Findings
Detected candidate companions around Chang 134 and V393 Car.
Achieved sensitivity to planetary-mass regimes in pulsating stars.
Highlighted the importance of precise time calibration for future missions.
Abstract
Early-type main-sequence pulsating stars such as \ds{} variables are one of the least explored class of targets in the search for exoplanets. Pulsation timing (PT) is an alternative technique to the most effective search methods. It exploits the light-travel-time effect (LTTE) to infer the presence of additional massive bodies around a pulsating star by measuring a periodic phase modulation of its signal. PT has been extremely successful in discovering and characterizing stellar binaries when it was applied to high-precision light curves over long temporal baselines, such as those delivered by the Kepler mission. In favorable conditions, the sensitivity of PT can reach the planetary-mass regime; one such candidate has already been claimed. The advent of TESS, with its nearly full-sky coverage and the availability of full-frame images, opens a great opportunity to expand this field of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
