A search for transiting planets around hot subdwarfs II. Supplementary methods and results from TESS Cycle 1
Antoine Thuillier, Val\'erie Van Grootel, Mart\'in D\'evora-Pajares,, Francisco J. Pozuelos, St\'ephane Charpinet, Lionel Siess

TL;DR
This study systematically searches for transiting planets around hot subdwarfs using TESS data, developing specialized tools, and finds no confirmed planets but sets upper limits on their occurrence rates.
Contribution
The paper introduces a dedicated pipeline SHERLOCK for transit detection in hot subdwarfs and applies it to TESS data, providing initial statistics on planet occurrence.
Findings
378 signals detected in light curves
26 stars selected for follow-up
No confirmed planets found
Abstract
Context. Hot subdwarfs, which are hot and small He-burning objects, are ideal targets for exploring the evolution of planetary systems after the red giant branch (RGB). Thus far, no planets have been confirmed around them, and no systematic survey to find planets has been carried out. Aims. In this project, we aim to perform a systematic transit survey in all light curves of hot subdwarfs from space-based telescopes (Kepler, K2, TESS, and CHEOPS). The goal is to compute meaningful statistics on two points: firstly, the occurrence rates of planets around hot subdwarfs, and secondly, the probability of survival for close-in planets engulfed during the RGB phase of their host. This paper focuses on the analysis of the observations carried out during cycle 1 of the TESS mission. Methods. We used our specifically designed pipeline SHERLOCK to search for transits in the available light…
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