Optimising spectroscopic observations of transiting exoplanets
Linn Boldt-Christmas, Fabio Lesjak, Ansgar Wehrhahn, Nikolai Piskunov,, Adam D. Rains, Lisa Nortmann, and Oleg Kochukhov

TL;DR
This paper models the trade-offs in spectroscopic observations of transiting exoplanets, identifying optimal exposure strategies to maximize detection significance by balancing SNR and spectral smearing.
Contribution
It introduces a modeling approach to determine optimal exposure times for high-resolution spectroscopy of exoplanets, considering various observational and planetary parameters.
Findings
Detection significance varies continuously with time resolution.
Maxima in detection significance depend on system and instrument parameters.
A strategy balancing exposure length and cadence improves detection success.
Abstract
When observing the atmospheres of transiting exoplanets using high-resolution spectroscopy, one aims to detect well-resolved spectral features with high signal-to-noise ratios (SNR) as is possible today with modern spectrographs. However, obtaining such high-quality observations comes with a trade-off: a lower cadence of fewer, longer exposures across the transit collects more photons thanks to reduced overheads, enhancing the SNR of each observation, while a higher cadence of several, shorter exposures minimises spectral feature smearing due to the continuously changing radial velocity of the planet. Considering that maximising SNR and minimising smearing are both beneficial to analysis, there is a need to establish where the optimal compromise lies. In this work, we model real transit events based on targets as they would be observed with VLT/CRIRES+ at Paranal Observatory. Creating…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
