The SHERLOCK pipeline: new exoplanet candidates in the WASP-16, HAT-P-27, HAT-P-26, and TOI-2411 systems
Mart\'in D\'evora-Pajares (1, 2), Francisco J. Pozuelos (3),, Antoine Thuillier (5, 6), Mathilde Timmermans (4), Val\'erie Van Grootel, (5), Victoria Bonidie (7, 8), Luis Cerde\~no Mota, Juan C. Su\'arez (1), ((1) Dpto. F\'isica Te\'orica y del Cosmos

TL;DR
The SHERLOCK pipeline is a comprehensive, user-friendly software tool that efficiently analyzes space-based exoplanet data, recovering known planets and discovering new candidates with high accuracy.
Contribution
It introduces an end-to-end, publicly available pipeline that streamlines the detection and validation of exoplanets from Kepler and TESS data, including new candidate identification.
Findings
Recovered 98% of known TESS objects and confirmed planets
Discovered four new exoplanet candidates in specific systems
Demonstrated high performance in exoplanet detection and validation
Abstract
The launches of NASA Kepler and TESS missions have significantly enhanced the interest in the exoplanet field during the last 15 years, providing a vast amount of public data that is being exploited by the community thanks to the continuous development of new analysis tools. However, using these tools is not straightforward, and users must dive into different codes, input-output formats, and methodologies, hindering an efficient and robust exploration of the available data. We present the SHERLOCK pipeline, an end-to-end public software that allows the users to easily explore observations from space-based missions such as TESS or Kepler to recover known planets and candidates issued by the official pipelines and search for new planetary candidates that remained unnoticed. The pipeline incorporates all the steps to search for transit-like features, vet potential candidates, provide…
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