Roman CCS White Paper: Adding Fields Hosting Globular Clusters To The Galactic Bulge Time Domain Survey
Samuel K. Grunblatt, Robert F. Wilson, Andrew Winter, B. Scott Gaudi,, Daniel Huber, Daniel A. Yahalomi, Andrea Bellini, Zachary R. Claytor, Jorge, Martinez Palomera, Thomas Barclay, Guangwei Fu, Adrian Price-Whelan

TL;DR
This paper proposes adding globular clusters NGC 6522 and NGC 6528 to the Roman Galactic Bulge Time Domain Survey to search for transiting planets, aiming to understand planet occurrence in different metallicity environments.
Contribution
It introduces a method to observe globular clusters with the Roman telescope to detect transiting planets and analyze their occurrence relative to metallicity and cluster environment.
Findings
Potential to detect transiting planets in globular clusters.
Assessment of planet occurrence differences based on metallicity.
Study of variable stars and stellar binary fractions.
Abstract
Despite multiple previous searches, no transiting planets have yet been identified within a globular cluster. This is believed to be due to a combination of factors: the low metallicities of most globular clusters suggests that there is significantly less planet-forming material per star in most globular clusters relative to the solar neighborhood, the high likelihood of dynamical interactions can also disrupt planetary orbits, and the data available for globular clusters is limited. However, transiting planets have been identified in open clusters, indicating that there may be planets in more massive clusters that have simply gone undetected, or that more massive clusters inhibit planet formation. Less than two degrees away from the nominal Galactic Bulge Time Domain Survey footprint, two globular clusters, NGC 6522 and NGC 6528, can be simultaneously observed by the Roman telescope…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
