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Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009

The CoRoT-7 planetary system: two orbiting super-Earths

D. Queloz; F. Bouchy; C. Moutou; A. Hatzes; G. Hébrard; R. Alonso; M. Auvergne; A. Baglin; Mauro Barbieri; P. Barge; Willy Benz; P. Bordé; Hans J. Deeg; M. Deleuil; R. Dvorak; A. Erikson; S. Ferraz Mello; M. Fridlund; D. Gandolfi; M. Gillon; E. W. Guenther; Tristan Guillot; L. Jorda; M. Hartmann; H. Lammer; A. Léger; A. Llebaria; C. Lovis; Pierre Magain; Michel Mayor

We report on an intensive observational campaign carried out with HARPS at the 3.6 m telescope at La Silla on the star CoRoT-7. Additional simultaneous photometric measurements carried out with the Euler Swiss telescope have demonstrated that the observed radial velocity variations are dominated by rotational modulation from cool spots on the stellar surface. Several approaches were used to extract the radial velocity signal of the planet(s) from the stellar activity signal. First, a simple pre-whitening procedure was employed to find and subsequently remove periodic signals from the complex frequency structure of the radial velocity data. The dominant frequency in the power spectrum was found at 23 days, which corresponds to the rotation period of CoRoT-7. The 0.8535 day period of CoRoT-7b planetary candidate was detected with an amplitude of 3.3 m s −1 . Most other frequencies, some with amplitudes larger than the CoRoT-7b signal, are most likely associated with activity. A second approach used harmonic decomposition of the rotational period and up to the first three harmonics to filter out the activity signal from radial velocity variations caused by orbiting planets. After correcting the radial velocity data for activity, two periodic signals are detected: the CoRoT-7b transit period and a second one with a period of 3.69 days and an amplitude of 4 m s −1 . This second signal was also found in the pre-whitening analysis. We attribute the second signal to a second, more remote planet CoRoT-7c . The orbital solution of both planets is compatible with circular orbits. The mass of CoRoT-7b is 4.8 ± 0. 8( M⊕) and that of CoRoT-7c is 8.4 ± 0. 9( M⊕), assuming both planets are on coplanar orbits. We also investigated the false positive scenario of a blend by a faint stellar binary, and this may be rejected by the stability of the bisector on a nightly scale. According to their masses both planets belong to the super-Earth planet category. The average density of CoRoT-7b is ρ = 5.6 ± 1. 3gc m −3 , similar to the Earth. The CoRoT-7 planetary system provides us with the first insight into the physical nature of short period super-Earth planets recently detected by radial velocity surveys. These planets may be denser than Neptune and therefore likely made of rocks like the Earth, or a mix of water ice and rocks.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013

Transiting exoplanets from the CoRoT space mission - XXIV. CoRoT-25b and CoRoT-26b: two low-density giant planets

J. M. Almenara; F. Bouchy; P. Gaulme; M. Deleuil; M. Havel; D. Gandolfi; Hans J. Deeg; G. Wuchterl; T. Guillot; B. Gardes; T. Pasternacki; S. Aigrain; Roi Alonso; M. Auvergne; A. Baglin; A. S. Bonomo; P. Bordé; J. Cabrera; S. Carpano; William D. Cochran; Sz. Csizmadia; C. Damiani; R. F. Díaz; R. Dvorak; Michael Endl; A. Erikson; S. Ferraz-Mello; M. Fridlund; G. Hébrard; Michaël Gillon

We report the discovery of two transiting exoplanets, CoRoT-25b and CoRoT-26b, both of low density, one of which is in the Saturn mass-regime. For each star, ground-based complementary observations through optical photometry and radial velocity measurements secured the planetary nature of the transiting body and allowed us to fully characterize them. For CoRoT-25b we found a planetary mass of 0.27 similar to 0.04 M-Jup, a radius of 1.08(-0.10)(+0.3) R-Jup and hence a mean density of 0.15(-0.06)(+ 0.15) g cm(-3). The planet orbits an F9 mainsequence star in a 4.86-day period, that has a V magnitude of 15.0, solar metallicity, and an age of 4.5(-2.0) (+1.8)-Gyr. CoRoT-26b orbits a slightly evolved G5 star of 9.06 +/- 1.5-Gyr age in a 4.20-day period that has solar metallicity and a V magnitude of 15.8. With a mass of 0.52 +/- 0.05 MJup, a radius of 1.26(-0.07)(+0.13) R-Jup, and a mean density of 0.28(-0.07)(+0.09) g cm(-3), it belongs to the low-mass hot-Jupiter population. Planetary evolution models allowed us to estimate a core mass of a few tens of Earth mass for the two planets with heavy-element mass fractions of 0.52(-0.15)(+0.08) and 0.26(-0.08)(+0.05), respectively, assuming that a small fraction of the incoming flux is dissipated at the center of the planet. In addition, these models indicate that CoRoT-26b is anomalously large compared with what standard models could account for, indicating that dissipation from stellar heating could cause this size.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014

Planets and stellar activity : hide and seek in the CoRoT-7 system

R. D. Haywood; A. Collier Cameron; D. Queloz; S. C. C. Barros; M. Deleuil; R. Fares; Michaël Gillon; A. Lanza; Christophe Lovis; Claire Moutou; F. Pepe; Don Pollacco; A. Santerne; D. Segransan; Yvonne C. Unruh

Since the discovery of the transiting super-Earth CoRoT-7b, several investigations have yielded different results for the number and masses of planets present in the system, mainly owing to the stars high level of activity. We re-observed CoRoT-7 in 2012 January with both HARPS and CoRoT, so that we now have the benefit of simultaneous radial-velocity and photometric data. This allows us to use the off-transit variations in the stars light curve to estimate the radial-velocity variations induced by the suppression of convective blueshift and the flux blocked by starspots. To account for activity-related effects in the radial velocities which do not have a photometric signature, we also include an additional activity term in the radial-velocity model, which we treat as a Gaussian process with the same covariance properties (and hence the same frequency structure) as the light curve. Our model was incorporated into a Monte Carlo Markov Chain in order to make a precise determination of the orbits of CoRoT-7b and CoRoT-7c. We measure the masses of planets b and c to be 4.73 +/- 0.95 and 13.56 +/- 1.08 M-circle plus, respectively. The density of CoRoT-7b is (6.61 +/- 1.72)(R-p/1.58 R-circle plus)(-3) g cm(-3), which is compatible with a rocky composition. We search for evidence of an additional planet d, identified by previous authors with a period close to 9 d. We are not able to confirm the existence of a planet with this orbital period, which is close to the second harmonic of the stellar rotation at similar to 7.9 d. Using Bayesian model selection, we find that a model with two planets plus activity-induced variations is most favoured.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

SOPHIE velocimetry of Kepler transit candidates - XVII. The physical properties of giant exoplanets within 400 days of period

A. Santerne; Claire Moutou; M. Tsantaki; F. Bouchy; G. Hébrard; V. Adibekyan; J. M. Almenara; Louis Amard; S. C. C. Barros; I. Boisse; A. S. Bonomo; G. Bruno; B. Courcol; M. Deleuil; O. Demangeon; R. F. Díaz; Tristan Guillot; M. Havel; G. Montagnier; A. Rajpurohit; J. Rey; N. C. Santos

While giant extrasolar planets have been studied for more than two decades now, there are still some open questions such as their dominant formation and migration process, as well as their atmospheric evolution in different stellar environments. In this paper, we study a sample of giant transiting exoplanets detected by the Kepler telescope with orbital periods up to 400 days. We first defined a sample of 129 giant-planet candidates that we followed up with the SOPHIE spectrograph (OHP, France) in a 6-year radial velocity campaign. This allow us to unveil the nature of these candidates and to measure a false-positive rate of 54.6 +/- 6.5 % for giant-planet candidates orbiting within 400 days of period. Based on a sample of confirmed or likely planets, we then derive the occurrence rates of giant planets in different ranges of orbital periods. The overall occurrence rate of giant planets within 400 days is 4.6 +/- 0.6 %. We recover, for the first time in the Kepler data, the different populations of giant planets reported by radial velocity surveys. Comparing these rates with other yields, we find that the occurrence rate of giant planets is lower only for hot jupiters but not for the longer period planets. We also derive a first measurement on the occurrence rate of brown dwarfs in the brown-dwarf desert with a value of 0.29 +/- 0.17 %. Finally, we discuss the physical properties of the giant planets in our sample. We confirm that giant planets receiving a moderate irradiation are not inflated but we find that they are in average smaller than predicted by formation and evolution models. In this regime of low-irradiated giant planets, we find a possible correlation between their bulk density and the Iron abundance of the host star, which needs more detections to be confirmed.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014

PASTIS: Bayesian extrasolar planet validation. I. General framework, models, and performance.

R. F. Díaz; J. M. Almenara; A. Santerne; Claire Moutou; Anthony Lethuillier; M. Deleuil

A large fraction of the smallest transiting planet candidates discovered by the Kepler and CoRoT space missions cannot be confirmed by a dynamical measurement of the mass using currently available observing facilities. To establish their planetary nature, the concept of planet validation has been advanced. This technique compares the probability of the planetary hypothesis against that of all reasonably conceivable alternative false positive (FP) hypotheses. The candidate is considered as validated if the posterior probability of the planetary hypothesis is sufficiently larger than the sum of the probabilities of all FP scenarios. In this paper, we present pastis, the Planet Analysis and Small Transit Investigation Software, a tool designed to perform a rigorous model comparison of the hypotheses involved in the problem of planet validation, and to fully exploit the information available in the candidate light curves. pastis self-consistently models the transit light curves and follow-up observations. Its object-oriented structure offers a large flexibility for defining the scenarios to be compared. The performance is explored using artificial transit light curves of planets and FPs with a realistic error distribution obtained from a Kepler light curve. We find that data support the correct hypothesis strongly only when the signal is high enough (transit signal-to-noise ratio above 50 for the planet case) and remain inconclusive otherwise. PLAnetary Transits and Oscillations of stars (PLATO) shall provide transits with high enough signal-to-noise ratio, but to establish the true nature of the vast majority of Kepler and CoRoT transit candidates additional data or strong reliance on hypotheses priors is needed.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009

VLT transit and occultation photometry for the bloated planet CoRoT-1b

M. Gillon; Brice-Olivier Demory; A. H. M. J. Triaud; Travis S. Barman; L. Hebb; Josefina Montalban; P. F. L. Maxted; D. Queloz; M. Deleuil; Pierre Magain

We present VLT eclipse photometry for the giant planet CoRoT-1b. We observed a transit in the R-band filter and an occultation in a narrow filter centered on 2.09 μm. Our analysis of this new photometry and published radial velocities, in combination with stellarevolutionary modeling, leads to a planetary mass and radius of 1.07 +0.13 −0.18 MJup and 1.45 +0.07 −0.13 RJup, confirming the very low density previously deduced from CoRoT photometry. The large occultation depth that we measure at 2.09 μm (0.278 +0.043 −0.066 %) is consistent with thermal emission and is better reproduced by an atmospheric model with no redistribution of the absorbed stellar flux to the night side of the planet.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011

Transiting exoplanets from the CoRoT space mission - XV. CoRoT-15b: a brown-dwarf transiting companion

F. Bouchy; M. Deleuil; Tristan Guillot; S. Aigrain; L. Carone; William D. Cochran; J. M. Almenara; R. Alonso; M. Auvergne; A. Baglin; P. Barge; A. S. Bonomo; P. Bordé; Szilard Csizmadia; K. De Bondt; H. J. Deeg; Rodrigo F. Díaz; R. Dvorak; Michael Endl; A. Erikson; S. Ferraz-Mello; M. Fridlund; D. Gandolfi; J -C Gazzano; N. P. Gibson; Michaël Gillon; E. W. Guenther; A. Hatzes; M. Havel; G. Hébrard

We report the discovery by the CoRoT space mission of a transiting brown dwarf orbiting a F7V star with an orbital period of 3.06 days. CoRoT-15b has a radius of 1.12 +0.30 ―0.15 R Jup and a mass of 63.3 ± 4.1 M Jup , and is thus the second transiting companion lying in the theoretical mass domain of brown dwarfs. CoRoT-15b is either very young or inflated compared to standard evolution models, a situation similar to that of M-dwarf stars orbiting close to solar-type stars. Spectroscopic constraints and an analysis of the lightcurve imply a spin period in the range 2.9-3.1 days for the central star, which is compatible with a double-synchronisation of the system.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011

SOPHIE velocimetry of Kepler transit candidates III. KOI-423b: an 18 Mjup transiting companion around an F7IV star

F. Bouchy; A. S. Bonomo; A. Santerne; Claire Moutou; M. Deleuil; R. F. Diaz; Anne Eggenberger; D. Ehrenreich; C. Gry; Tristan Guillot; M. Havel; G. Hébrard; S. Udry

We report the strategy and results of our radial velocity fol low-up campaign with the SOPHIE spectrograph (1.93-m OHP) of four transiting planetary candidates discovered by the Kepler space mission. We discuss the selection of the candidates KOI-428, KOI-410, KOI-552, and KOI-423. KOI-428 was established as a hot Jupiter transiting the largest and the most evolved star discover ed so far and is described by Santerne et al. (2011a). KOI-410 does not present radial velocity change greater than 120 m s −1 , which allows us to exclude at 3σ a transiting companion heavier than 3.4 MJup. KOI-552b appears to be a transiting low-mass star with a mass ratio of 0.15. KOI-423b is a new transiting companion in the overlapping region between massive planets and brown dwarfs. With a radius of 1.22± 0.11 RJup and a mass of 18.0± 0.92 MJup, KOI-423b is orbiting an F7IV star with a period of 21.0874± 0.0002 days and an eccentricity of 0.12±0.02. From the four selected Kepler candidates, at least three of them have a Jupiter-size trans iting companion, but two of them are not in the mass domain of Jupiter-like planets. KOI-423b and KOI-522b are members of a growing population of known massive companions orbiting close to an F-type star. This population currently appears to be absent around G-type stars, possibly due to their rapid braking and the engulfment of their companions by tidal decay.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Transiting exoplanets from the CoRoT space mission X. CoRoT-10b: a giant planet in a 13.24 day eccentric orbit

A. S. Bonomo; A. Santerne; R. Alonso; J.-C. Gazzano; M. Havel; S. Aigrain; M. Auvergne; A. Baglin; Mauro Barbieri; Pierre Barge; Willy Benz; P. Bordé; F. Bouchy; H. Bruntt; Juan Cabrera; Andrew Collier Cameron; L. Carone; S. Carpano; Szilard Csizmadia; M. Deleuil; Hans J. Deeg; R. Dvorak; A. Erikson; S. Ferraz-Mello; M. Fridlund; D. Gandolfi; Michaël Gillon; E. W. Guenther; Tristan Guillot; A. Hatzes

Context. The space telescope CoRoT searches for transiting extrasolar planets by continuously monitoring the optical flux of thousands of stars in several fields of view. Aims. We report the discovery of CoRoT-10b, a giant planet on a highly eccentric orbit (e = 0.53 ± 0.04) revolving in 13.24 days around a faint (V = 15.22) metal-rich K1V star. Methods. We used CoRoT photometry, radial velocity observations taken with the HARPS spectrograph, and UVES spectra of the parent star to derive the orbital, stellar, and planetary parameters. Results. We derive a radius of the planet of 0.97 ± 0.07 RJup and a mass of 2.75 ± 0.16 MJup. The bulk density, ρp = 3.70 ± 0. 83 gc m −3 ,i s∼2.8 that of Jupiter. The core of CoRoT-10b could contain up to 240 M⊕ of heavy elements. Moving along its eccentric orbit, the planet experiences a 10.6-fold variation in insolation. Owing to the long circularisation time, τcirc > 7G yr, a resonant perturber is not required to excite and maintain the high eccentricity of CoRoT-10b.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Photospheric activity, rotation, and radial velocity variations of the planet-hosting star CoRoT-7

A. Lanza; A. S. Bonomo; C. Moutou; I. Pagano; S. Messina; G. Leto; G. Cutispoto; S. Aigrain; R. Alonso; P. Barge; M. Deleuil; M. Auvergne; A. Baglin; A. Collier Cameron

Context. The CoRoT satellite has recently discovered the transits of an Earth-like planet across the disc of a late-type magnetically active star dubbed CoRoT-7, while a second planet was detected after filtering out the radial velocity (hereafter RV) variations due to stellar activity. Aims. We investigate the magnetic activity of CoRoT-7 and use the results for a better understanding of the impact of magnetic activity on stellar RV variations. Methods. We derived the longitudinal distribution of active regions on CoRoT-7 from a maximum entropy spot model of the CoRoT lightcurve. Assuming that each active region consists of dark spots and bright faculae in a fixed proportion, we synthesized the expected RV variations. Results. Active regions are mainly located at three active longitudes that appear to migrate at different rates, probably as a consequence of surface differential rotation, for which a lower limit of ΔΩ/ Ω= 0.058 ± 0.017 is found. The synthesized activity-induced RV variations reproduce the amplitude of the observed RV curve and are used to study the impact of stellar activity on planetary detection. Conclusions. In spite of the non-simultaneous CoRoT and HARPS observations, our study confirms the validity of the method previously adopted to filter out RV variations induced by stellar activity. We find a false-alarm probability <10 −4 that the RV oscillations attributed to CoRoT-7b and CoRoT-7c are spurious effects of noise and activity. Additionally, our model suggests that other periodicities found in the observed RV curve of CoRoT-7 could be explained by active regions whose visibility is modulated by a differential stellar rotation with periods ranging from 23.6 to 27.6 days.

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G. Hébrard

Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris

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F. Bouchy

University of Provence

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R. Alonso

University of La Laguna

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Claire Moutou

Aix-Marseille University

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A. Santerne

Aix-Marseille University

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E. W. Guenther

Spanish National Research Council

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A. Erikson

German Aerospace Center

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M. Fridlund

European Space Research and Technology Centre

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