Searching for Transit Timing Variations in young transiting systems
Ana Isabel Lopez Murillo, Andrew W. Mann, Madyson G. Barber, Andrew Vanderburg, Pa Chia Thao, Andrew W. Boyle

TL;DR
This study searches for transit timing variations in young transiting planetary systems using Kepler, K2, and TESS data, finding a higher TTV occurrence rate than in older systems, which could help measure planet masses.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic search for TTVs in young systems, identifying new candidates and comparing TTV rates with older systems, highlighting the potential for mass measurements.
Findings
28.3% of young planets show TTV evidence
Higher TTV rate in young systems compared to older ones
Spot activity has minimal impact on TTV detection
Abstract
The discovery of young (<800 Myr) transiting planets has provided a new avenue to explore how planets form and evolve over their lifetimes. Mass measurements for these planets would be invaluable, but radial velocity surveys of young systems are often overwhelmed by stellar activity. Transit timing variations (TTVs) offer an alternative route to measure masses that are less impacted by signals from the host star. Here we search for candidate TTVs in a sample of 39 young systems hosting 53 transiting planets using data from Kepler, K2, and TESS. We recover previously reported TTVs for 11 planets, including those in V1298 Tau, TOI-2076, Kepler-51, and TOI-1227, and identify new candidate TTVs for four planets (DS Tuc Ab, HD 63433b, K2-101b, and Kepler-1643b). In total, 28.3 +/- 6.2% of young planets in our sample show evidence of TTVs, which is higher than the rate from Kepler on mostly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
