Prospects for the Detection of Earth-Mass Planets
Andrew Gould (Ohio State), B. Scott Gaudi (CfA), Cheongho Han, (Chungbuk National University, Ohio State)

TL;DR
This paper compares various methods for detecting Earth-mass planets, highlighting that microlensing is more effective at realistic S/N thresholds, while other methods may yield few detections unless planets are very common.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of detection techniques for Earth-mass planets, emphasizing the importance of S/N thresholds and the relative effectiveness of microlensing.
Findings
Microlensing has a shallower S/N decline, making it more sensitive at realistic thresholds.
Radial velocities, transits, and astrometry show steep detection declines at higher S/N.
Expected detections at S/N ~ 25 are very limited across all methods.
Abstract
We compare potential state-of-the-art experiments for detecting Earth-mass planets around main-sequence stars using radial velocities, transits, astrometry, and microlensing. For conventionally-discussed signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) thresholds, S/N ~ 8, the last three methods are roughly comparable in terms of both the total number of planets detected and the mass distribution of their host stars. However we argue that S/N ~ 25 is a more conservative and realistic S/N threshold. We show analytically and numerically that the decline in the number of detections as a function of S/N is very steep for radial velocities, transits, and astrometry, such that the number of expected detections at S/N ~ 25 is more than an order-of-magnitude smaller than at conventional S/N thresholds. Indeed, unless Earth-mass planets are very common or are packed much closer to their parent stars than in the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Inertial Sensor and Navigation · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
