On the Effectiveness of the Planetary Infrared Excess (PIE) Technique to Retrieve the Parameters of Multiplanet Systems around M dwarfs: A Case Study on the TRAPPIST-1 System
L. C. Mayorga, J. Lustig-Yaeger, K. B. Stevenson

TL;DR
The paper evaluates the planetary infrared excess (PIE) technique using the TRAPPIST-1 system to determine its effectiveness in detecting and characterizing multiple exoplanets, especially with upcoming infrared observatories.
Contribution
It demonstrates the potential and limitations of the PIE technique in resolving multiplanet systems around M dwarfs, including its application to TRAPPIST-1 and future observatories.
Findings
PIE can infer multiple planets even when only the star is known.
The technique's accuracy depends on wavelength range and noise levels.
PIE struggles to constrain semi-major axes without prior knowledge.
Abstract
The planetary infrared excess (PIE) technique has the potential to efficiently detect and characterize the thermal spectra of both transiting and non-transiting exoplanets. However, the technique has not been evaluated on multiplanet systems. We use the TRAPPIST-1 system as our test bed to evaluate PIE's ability to resolve multiple planets. We follow the unfolding discoveries in the TRAPPIST-1 system and examine the results from the PIE technique at every stage. We test the information gained from observations with JWST and next-generation infrared observatories like the proposed MIRECLE mission concept. We find that even in the case where only the star is known, the PIE technique would infer the presence of multiple planets in the system. The precise number inferred is dependent on the wavelength range of the observation and the noise level of the data. We also find that in such a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Calibration and Measurement Techniques · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate
