Homogeneous search for spot transits in Kepler and TESS photometry of K $-$ M-type main-sequence stars
Andr\'as Haris, Mikko Tuomi, Thomas Hackman

TL;DR
This study develops a Bayesian framework to systematically detect and analyze starspots occulted during exoplanet transits in Kepler and TESS data of K- and M-type stars, revealing new starspot candidates and estimating detection frequencies.
Contribution
It introduces a robust Bayesian analysis method for identifying starspot occultations in high-cadence transit light curves from Kepler and TESS, expanding the understanding of stellar magnetic activity.
Findings
Detected 105 starspot occultation candidates in 99 planetary systems.
Reported new starspot candidates on HD 189733 and TOI-1268.
Estimated starspot detection frequency of 3.7-4.2% for TESS and 37.5% for Kepler.
Abstract
Late-type stars are known to host numerous exoplanets, and their photometric variability, primarily caused by rotational modulation, provides a unique opportunity to study starspots. As exoplanets transit in front of their host stars, they may occult darker, spotted regions on the stellar surfaces. The monitoring of starspots from planetary transits, known as transit mapping, offers a possibility to detect small dark regions on magnetically active, late-type stars. These spots may be so small that they would be undetectable to other methods used to reconstruct stellar magnetic activity. We describe a Bayesian analysis framework on the transit light curves of planets orbiting K- and M-type main-sequence stars in search for spot occultation event candidates. We present a systematic analysis of high-precision, high-cadence light curves from Kepler and TESS to detect and characterise…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
