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Search for a circum-planetary material and orbital period variations of short-period Kepler exoplanet candidates

Garai, Zoltán and Zhou, G. and Budaj, J. and Stellingwerf, R. F. (2014) Search for a circum-planetary material and orbital period variations of short-period Kepler exoplanet candidates. ASTRONOMISCHE NACHRICHTEN, 335 (10). pp. 1018-1036. ISSN 0004-6337

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Abstract

A unique short-period (P = 0.65356(1) days) Mercury-size Kepler exoplanet candidate KIC012557548b has been dis- covered recently by Rappaport et al. (2012). This object is a transiting disintegrating exoplanet with a circum-planetary material – comet-like tail. Close-in exoplanets, like KIC012557548b, are subjected to the greatest planet-star interactions. This interaction may have various forms. In certain cases it may cause formation of the comet-like tail. Strong interaction with the host star, and/or presence of an additional planet may lead to variations in the orbital period of the planet. Our main aim is to search for comet-like tails similar to KIC012557548b and for long-term orbital period variations. We are curious about frequency of comet-like tail formation among short-period Kepler exoplanet candidates. We concentrate on a sample of 20 close-in candidates with a period similar to KIC012557548b from the Kepler mission. We first improved the preliminary orbital periods and obtained the transit light curves. Subsequently we searched for the signatures of a circum-planetary material in these light curves. For this purpose the final transit light curve of each planet was fitted with a theoretical light curve, and the residuals were examined for abnormalities. We then searched for possible long-term changes of the orbital periods using the method of phase dispersion minimization. In 8 cases out of 20 we found some interesting peculiarities, but none of the exoplanet candidates showed signs of a comet-like tail. It seems that the frequency of comet-like tail formation among short-period Kepler exoplanet candidates is very low. We searched for comet-like tails based on the period criterion. Based on our results we can conclude that the short-period criterion is not enough to cause comet-like tail formation. This result is in agreement with the theory of the thermal wind and planet evaporation (Perez-Becker & Chiang 2013). We also found 3 cases of candidates which showed some changes of the orbital period. Based on our results we can see that orbital period changes are not caused by comet-like tail disintegration processes, but rather by possible massive outer companions.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Q Science / természettudomány > QB Astronomy, Astrophysics / csillagászat, asztrofizika
SWORD Depositor: MTMT SWORD
Depositing User: MTMT SWORD
Date Deposited: 11 Apr 2024 13:47
Last Modified: 11 Apr 2024 13:47
URI: https://real.mtak.hu/id/eprint/192353

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