Ground-based photometry of space-based transit detections: Photometric follow-up of the CoRoT mission

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Abstract

The motivation, techniques and performance of the ground-based photometric follow-up of transit detections by the CoRoT space mission are presented. Its principal raison d'être arises from the much higher spatial resolution of common ground-based telescopes in comparison to CoRoT's cameras. This allows the identification of many transit candidates as arising from eclipsing binaries that are contaminating CoRoT's lightcurves, even in low-amplitude transit events that cannot be detected with ground-based obervations. For the ground observations, "on" - "off" photometry is now largely employed, in which only a short timeseries during a transit and a section outside a transit is observed and compared photometrically. CoRoTplanet candidates' transits are being observed by a dedicated team with access to telescopes with sizes ranging from 0.2 to 2 m. As an example, the process that led to the rejection of contaminating eclipsing binaries near the host star of the Super-Earth planet CoRoT-7b is shown. Experiences and techniques from this work may also be useful for other transit-detection experiments, when the discovery instrument obtains data with a relatively low angular resolution.

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Deeg, H. J., Gillon, M., Shporer, A., Rouan, D., Stecklum, B., Aigrain, S., … Titz, R. (2009). Ground-based photometry of space-based transit detections: Photometric follow-up of the CoRoT mission. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 506(1), 343–352. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/200912011

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