Analytical determination of orbital elements using Fourier analysis. II. Gaia astrometry and its combination with radial velocities
J.-B. Delisle, D. S\'egransan

TL;DR
This paper introduces analytical methods combining Fourier analysis with astrometric and radial velocity data to efficiently detect and characterize stellar companions, aiding Gaia's exoplanet discovery efforts.
Contribution
It develops a general linear periodogram framework with analytical formulas for false alarm probability and orbital element estimation, enhancing Gaia data analysis.
Findings
Analytical formulas for FAP of periodogram peaks.
Methods applied to Hipparcos data for known exoplanet hosts.
Framework integrated into Gaia exoplanet pipeline.
Abstract
The ESA global astrometry space mission Gaia has been monitoring the position of a billion stars since 2014. The analysis of such a massive dataset is challenging in terms of the data processing involved. In particular, the blind detection and characterization of single or multiple companions to stars (planets, brown dwarfs, or stars) using Gaia astrometry requires highly efficient algorithms. In this article, we present a set of analytical methods to detect and characterize companions in scanning space astrometric time series as well as via a combination of astrometric and radial velocity time series. We propose a general linear periodogram framework and we derive analytical formulas for the false alarm probability (FAP) of periodogram peaks. Once a significant peak has been identified, we provide analytical estimates of all the orbital elements of the companion based on the Fourier…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
