J. P. Faria
University of Porto
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Featured researches published by J. P. Faria.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014
N. C. Santos; A. Mortier; J. P. Faria; X. Dumusque; V. Zh. Adibekyan; E. Delgado-Mena; P. Figueira; L. Benamati; I. Boisse; D. Cunha; J. Gomes da Silva; G. Lo Curto; C. Lovis; J. H. C. Martins; M. Mayor; C. Melo; M. Oshagh; F. Pepe; D. Queloz; A. Santerne; D. Ségransan; A. Sozzetti; S. G. Sousa; S. Udry
Context. The search for planets orbiting metal-poor stars is of utmost importance for our understanding of planet formation models. However, no dedicated searches have been conducted so far for very low mass planets orbiting such objects. Only a few cases of low-mass planets orbiting metal-poor stars are thus known. Amongst these, HD 41248 is a metal-poor, solar-type star on the orbit of which a resonant pair of super-Earth-like planets has been announced. This detection was based on 62 radial velocity measurements obtained with the HARPS spectrograph (public data). Aims. We present a new planet search program that is using the HARPS spectrograph to search for Neptunes and super-Earths that orbit a sample of metal-poor FGK dwarfs. We then present a detailed analysis of 162 additional radial velocity measurements of HD 41248, obtained within this program, with the goal of confirming the existence of the proposed planetary system. Methods. We analysed the precise radial velocities, obtained with the HARPS spectrograph, together with several stellar activity diagnostics and line profile indicators. Results. A careful analysis shows no evidence for the planetary system. One of the signals, with a period of similar to 25 days, is shown to be related to the rotational period of the star, and is clearly seen in some of the activity proxies. We were unable to convincingly retrieve the remaining signal (P similar to 18 days) in the new dataset. Conclusions. We discuss possible causes for the complex (evolving) signals observed in the data of HD 41248, proposing that they might be explained by the appearance and disappearance of active regions on the surface of a star with strong differential rotation, or by a combination of the sparse data sampling and active region evolution.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015
J. H. C. Martins; N. C. Santos; P. Figueira; J. P. Faria; M. Montalto; I. Boisse; D. Ehrenreich; C. Lovis; M. Mayor; C. Melo; F. Pepe; S. G. Sousa; S. Udry; D. Cunha
Context. The detection of reflected light from an exoplanet is a difficult technical challenge at optical wavelengths. Even though this signal is expected to replicate the stellar signal, not only is it several orders of magnitude fainter, but it is also hidden among the stellar noise. Aims. We apply a variant of the cross-correlation technique to HARPS observations of 51 Peg to detect the reflected signal from planet 51 Peg b. Methods. Our method makes use of the cross-correlation function (CCF) of a binary mask with high-resolution spectra to amplify the minute planetary signal that is present in the spectra by a factor proportional to the number of spectral lines when performing the cross correlation. The resulting cross-correlation functions are then normalized by a stellar template to remove the stellar signal. Carefully selected sections of the resulting normalized CCFs are stacked to increase the planetary signal further. The recovered signal allows probing several of the planetary properties, including its real mass and albedo. Results. We detect evidence for the reflected signal from planet 51 Peg b at a significance of 3 sigma(noise). The detection of the signal permits us to infer a real mass of 0.46(-0.01)(+0.06) M-Jup (assuming a stellar mass of 1.04 M-Sun) for the planet and an orbital inclination of 80(-19)(+10) degrees. The analysis of the data also allows us to infer a tentative value for the (radius-dependent) geometric albedo of the planet. The results suggest that 51Peg b may be an inflated hot Jupiter with a high albedo (e.g., an albedo of 0.5 yields a radius of 1.9 +/- 0.3 R-Jup for a signal amplitude of 6.0 +/- 0.4 x 10(-5)). Conclusions. We confirm that the method we perfected can be used to retrieve an exoplanets reflected signal, even with current observing facilities. The advent of next generation of instruments (e.g. VLT-ESO /ESPRESSO) and observing facilities (e.g. a new generation of ELT telescopes) will yield new opportunities for this type of technique to probe deeper into exoplanets and their atmospheres.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016
J. P. Faria; Raphaëlle D. Haywood; Brendon J. Brewer; P. Figueira; M. Oshagh; A. Santerne; N. C. Santos
Stellar activity can induce signals in the radial velocities of stars, complicating the detection of orbiting low-mass planets. We present a method to determine the number of planetary signals present in radial-velocity datasets of active stars, using only radial-velocity observations. Instead of considering separate fits with different number of planets, we use a birth-death Markov chain Monte Carlo algorithm to infer the posterior distribution for the number of planets in a single run. In a natural way, the marginal distributions for the orbital parameters of all planets are also inferred. This method is applied to HARPS data of CoRoT-7. We confidently recover both CoRoT-7b and CoRoT-7c although the data show evidence for additional signals.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
Kuldeep Verma; J. P. Faria; H. M. Antia; Sarbani Basu; A. Mazumdar; M. J. P. F. G. Monteiro; T. Appourchaux; W. J. Chaplin; R. A. García; T. S. Metcalfe
16 Cyg A and B are among the brightest stars observed by Kepler. What makes these stars more interesting is that they are solar analogs. 16 Cyg A and B exhibit solar-like oscillations. In this work we use oscillation frequencies obtained using 2.5 yr of Kepler data to determine the current helium abundance of these stars. For this we use the fact that the helium ionization zone leaves a signature on the oscillation frequencies and that this signature can be calibrated to determine the helium abundance of that layer. By calibrating the signature of the helium ionization zone against models of known helium abundance, the helium abundance in the envelope of 16 Cyg A is found to lie in the range of 0.231 to 0.251 and that of 16 Cyg B lies in the range of 0.218 to 0.266.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015
A. Mortier; J. P. Faria; C.M. Correia; A. Santerne; N. C. Santos
Context. Frequency analyses are very important in astronomy today, not least in the ever-growing field of exoplanets, where short-period signals in stellar radial velocity data are investigated. Periodograms are the main (and powerful) tools for this purpose. However, recovering the correct frequencies and assessing the probability of each frequency is not straightforward. Aims. We provide a formalism that is easy to implement in a code, to describe a Bayesian periodogram that includes weights and a constant offset in the data. The relative probability between peaks can be easily calculated with this formalism. We discuss the differences and agreements between the various periodogram formalisms with simulated examples. Methods. We used the Bayesian probability theory to describe the probability that a full sine function (including weights derived from the errors on the data values and a constant offset) with a specific frequency is present in the data. Results. From the expression for our Baysian generalised Lomb-Scargle periodogram (BGLS), we can easily recover the expression for the non-Bayesian version. In the simulated examples we show that this new formalism recovers the underlying periods better than previous versions. A Python-based code is available for the community.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014
P. Figueira; J. P. Faria; E. Delgado-Mena; V. Zh. Adibekyan; S. G. Sousa; N. C. Santos; G. Israelian
Aims. We study the impact of the presence of planets on the lithium abundance of host stars and evaluate the previous claim that planet hosts exhibit lithium depletion when compared to their non-host counterparts. Methods. Using previously published lithium abundances, we remove the confounding effect of the different fundamental stellar parameters by applying a multivariable regression on our dataset. In doing so, we explicitly make an assumption made implicitly by different authors: that lithium abundance depends linearly on fundamental stellar parameters. Using a moderator variable to distinguish stars with planets from those without, we evaluate the existence of an offset in lithium abundances between the two groups. We perform this analysis first for stars that present a clear lithium detection exclusively and include in a second analysis upper lithium measurements. Results. Our analysis shows that under the above-mentioned assumption of linearity, a statistically significant negative offset in lithium abundance between planet hosts and non-hosts is recovered. We concluded that an inflation on the lithium uncertainty estimations by a factor of larger than 5 is required to render the measured offset compatible with zero at less than 3-4 {\sigma} and make it non-significant. We demonstrated that the offset as delivered by our method depends on the different nature of the stars in the two samples. We did so by showing that the offset is reduced down to zero if the planet-host stars are replaced by comparison stars. Moreover, the measured depletion is still significant when one imposes different constraints on the dataset, such as a limit in planetary mass or constrain the host temperature to around solar value. We conclude then that planet-host stars exhibit enhanced lithium depletion when compared with non-host stars. (abridged)
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016
V. Adibekyan; E. Delgado-Mena; P. Figueira; S. G. Sousa; N. C. Santos; J. I. González Hernández; I. Minchev; J. P. Faria; G. Israelian; G. Harutyunyan; L. Suárez-Andrés; A. A. Hakobyan
During the past decade, several studies reported a correlation between chemical abundances of stars and condensation temperature (also known as Tc trend). However, the real astrophysical nature of this correlation is still debated. The main goal of this work is to explore the possible dependence of the Tc trend on stellar Galactocentric distances, Rmean. We used high-quality spectra of about 40 stars observed with the HARPS and UVES spectrographs to derive precise stellar parameters, chemical abundances, and stellar ages. A differential line-by-line analysis was applied to achieve the highest possible precision in the chemical abundances. We confirm previous results that [X/Fe] abundance ratios depend on stellar age and that for a given age, some elements also show a dependence on Rmean. When using the whole sample of stars, we observe a weak hint that the Tc trend depends on Rmean. The observed dependence is very complex and disappears when only stars with similar ages are considered. To conclude on the possible dependence of the Tc trend on the formation place of stars, a larger sample of stars with very similar atmospheric parameters and stellar ages observed at different Galactocentric distances is needed
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016
V. Adibekyan; E. Delgado-Mena; P. Figueira; S. G. Sousa; N. C. Santos; J. P. Faria; J. I. González Hernández; G. Israelian; G. Harutyunyan; L. Suárez-Andrés; A. A. Hakobyan
Context. Several studies have reported a correlation between the chemical abundances of stars and condensation temperature (known as T c trend). Very recently, a strong T c trend was reported for the ζ Reticuli binary system, which consists of two solar analogs. The observed trend in ζ 2 Ret relative to its companion was explained by the presence of a debris disk around ζ 2 Ret. Aims. Our goal is to re-evaluate the presence and variability of the T c trend in the ζ Reticuli system and to understand the impact of the presence of the debris disk on a star. Methods. We used very high-quality spectra of the two stars retrieved from the HARPS archive to derive very precise stellar parameters and chemical abundances. We derived the stellar parameters with the classical (nondifferential) method, while we applied a differential line-by-line analysis to achieve the highest possible precision in abundances, which are fundamental to explore for very tiny differences in the abundances between the stars. Results. We confirm that the abundance difference between ζ 2 Ret and ζ 1 Ret shows a significant (~2 σ ) correlation with T c . However, we also find that the T c trends depend on the individual spectrum used (even if always of very high quality). In particular, we find significant but varying differences in the abundances of the same star from different individual high-quality spectra. Conclusions. Our results for the ζ Reticuli system show, for example, that nonphysical factors, such as the quality of spectra employed and errors that are not accounted for, can be at the root of the T c trends for the case of individual spectra.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017
N. C. Santos; V. Adibekyan; P. Figueira; D. T. Andreasen; S. C. C. Barros; E. Delgado-Mena; O. Demangeon; J. P. Faria; M. Oshagh; S. G. Sousa; Pedro T. P. Viana; A. C. S. Ferreira
Analysis of the statistical properties of exoplanets, together with those of their host stars, are providing a unique view into the process of planet formation and evolution. In this paper we explore the properties of the mass distribution of giant planet companions to solar-type stars, in a quest for clues about their formation process. With this goal in mind we studied, with the help of standard statistical tests, the mass distribution of giant planets using data from the exoplanet.eu catalog and the SWEET-Cat database of stellar parameters for stars with planets. We show that the mass distribution of giant planet companions is likely to present more than one population with a change in regime around 4\,M
Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres | 2016
P. Figueira; J. P. Faria; V. Zh. Adibekyan; M. Oshagh; N. C. Santos
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