Transit Search for Exoplanets around Alpha Centauri A and B with ASTERIA
Abstract
Alpha Centauri is a triple star system with two Sun-like stars, α Cen A (V = 0.01) and B (V = 1.33), and a third fainter red dwarf star, Proxima Centauri. Most current transit missions cannot produce precision photometry of α Cen A and B as their detectors saturate for these very bright stars. The Arcsecond Space Telescope Enabling Research in Astrophysics (ASTERIA) was a technology demonstration mission that successfully demonstrated two key technologies necessary for precision photometry achieving line-of-sight fine-pointing stability of 0.5″ rms and focal plane temperature control of ±0.01 K over a period of 20 minutes. The payload consisted of a 6.7 cm aperture diameter refractive camera and used a scientific complementary metal-oxide semiconductor detector that enabled monitoring of the brightest stars without saturating. We obtained spatially unresolved (blended) observations of α Cen A and B during opportunistic science campaigns as part of ASTERIA's extended mission. The resulting 1σ photometric precision for the blended α Cen A and B data is 250 ppm (parts per million) per 9 s exposure. We do not find evidence of transits in the blended data. We establish limits for transiting exoplanets around both α Cen A and B using transit signal injection and recovery tests. We find that ASTERIA is sensitive to planets with radii as small as 3.0 R⊕ around α Cen A and 3.7 R⊕ around α Cen B, corresponding to signals of ∼500 ppm (signal-to-noise ratio = 5.0) in the blended data, with periods ranging from 0.5 to 6 days.
- Publication:
-
The Astronomical Journal
- Pub Date:
- June 2021
- DOI:
- 10.3847/1538-3881/abf2c0
- Bibcode:
- 2021AJ....161..275K
- Keywords:
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- Exoplanets;
- Transit photometry;
- Space telescopes;
- 498;
- 1709;
- 1547