Exoplanet discoveries with the CoRoT space observatory

Solar System Research 44:6 (2010) 520-526

Authors:

H Lammer, R Dvorak, M Deleuil, P Barge, HJ Deeg, C Moutou, A Erikson, S Csizmadia, B Tingley, H Bruntt, M Havel, S Aigrain, JM Almenara, R Alonso, M Auvergne, A Baglin, M Barbieri, W Benz, AS Bonomo, P Bordé, F Bouchy, J Cabrera, L Carone, S Carpano, D Ciardi, S Ferraz-Mello, M Fridlund, D Gandolfi, JC Gazzano, M Gillon, P Gondoin, E Guenther, T Guillot, R den Hartog, J Hasiba, A Hatzes, M Hidas, G Hébrard, L Jorda, P Kabath, A Léger, T Lister, A Llebaria, C Lovis, M Mayor, T Mazeh, A Mura, M Ollivier, H Ottacher, M Pätzold, F Pepe, F Pont, D Queloz, M Rabus, H Rauer, D Rouan, B Samuel, J Schneider, A Shporer, B Stecklum, M Steller, R Street, S Udry, J Weingrill, G Wuchterl

Abstract:

The CoRoT space observatory is a project which is led by the French space agency CNES and leading space research institutes in Austria, Brazil, Belgium, Germany and Spain and also the European Space Agency ESA. CoRoT observed since its launch in December 27, 2006 about 100 000 stars for the exoplanet channel, during 150 days uninterrupted high-precision photometry. Since the The CoRoT-team has several exoplanet candidates which are currently analyzed under its study, we report here the discoveries of nine exoplanets which were observed by CoRoT. Discovered exoplanets such as CoRoT-3b populate the brown dwarf desert and close the gap of measured physical properties between usual gas giants and very low mass stars. CoRoT discoveries extended the known range of planet masses down to about 4.8 Earth-masses (CoRoT-7b) and up to 21 Jupiter masses (CoRoT-3b), the radii to about 1.68 × 0.09 REarth (CoRoT-7b) and up to the most inflated hot Jupiter with 1.49 × 0.09 REarth found so far (CoRoT-1b), and the transiting exoplanet with the longest period of 95.274 days (CoRoT-9b). Giant exoplanets have been detected at low metallicity, rapidly rotating and active, spotted stars. Two CoRoT planets have host stars with the lowest content of heavy elements known to show a transit hinting towards a different planethost-star-metallicity relation then the one found by radial-velocity search programs. Finally the properties of the CoRoT-7b prove that rocky planets with a density close to Earth exist outside the Solar System. Finally the detection of the secondary transit of CoRoT-1b at a sensitivity level of 10-5 and the very clear detection of the "super-Earth" CoRoT-7b at 3.5 × 10-4 relative flux are promising evidence that the space observatory is being able to detect even smaller exoplanets with the size of the Earth. © 2010 Pleiades Publishing, Ltd.

Transit timing analysis of CoRoT-1b: (Research Note)

Astronomy and Astrophysics 510:1 (2010)

Authors:

S Csizmadia, S Renner, P Barge, E Agol, S Aigrain, R Alonso, JM Almenara, AS Bonomo, P Bordé, F Bouchy, J Cabrera, HJ Deeg, R De La Reza, M Deleuil, R Dvorak, A Erikson, EW Guenther, M Fridlund, P Gondoin, T Guillot, A Hatzes, L Jorda, H Lammer, C Lázaro, A Léger, A Llebaria, P Magain, C Moutou, M Ollivier, M Pätzold, D Queloz, H Rauer, D Rouan, J Schneider, G Wuchterl, D Gandolfi

Abstract:

Context: CoRoT, the pioneer space-based transit search, steadily provides thousands of high-precision light curves with continuous time sampling over periods of up to 5 months. The transits of a planet perturbed by an additional object are not strictly periodic. By studying the transit timing variations (TTVs), additional objects can be detected in the system. Aims: A transit timing analysis of CoRoT-1b is carried out to constrain the existence of additional planets in the system. Methods: We used data obtained by an improved version of the CoRoT data pipeline (version 2.0). Individual transits were fitted to determine the mid-transit times, and we analyzed the derived O-C diagram. N-body integrations were used to place limits on secondary planets. Results: No periodic timing variations with a period shorter than the observational window (55 days) are found. The presence of an Earth-mass Trojan is not likely. A planet of mass greater than ∼1 Earth mass can be ruled out by the present data if the object is in a 2:1 (exterior) mean motion resonance with CoRoT-1b. Considering initially circular orbits: (i) super-Earths (less than 10 Earthmasses) are excluded for periods less than about 3.5 days; (ii) Saturn-like planets can be ruled out for periods less than about 5 days; (iii) Jupiter-like planets should have a minimum orbital period of about 6.5 days. © 2010 ESO.

Transiting exoplanets from the CoRoT space mission. XIV. CoRoT-11b: a transiting massive “hot-Jupiter” in a prograde orbit around a rapidly rotating F-type star

åp 524 (2010) A55-A55

Authors:

D Gandolfi, G Hébrard, R Alonso, M Deleuil, EW Guenther, M Fridlund, M Endl, P Eigmüller, S Csizmadia, M Havel, S Aigrain, M Auvergne, A Baglin, P Barge, AS Bonomo, P Bordé, F Bouchy, H Bruntt, J Cabrera, S Carpano, L Carone, WD Cochran, HJ Deeg, R Dvorak, J Eislöffel, A Erikson, S Ferraz-Mello, J-C Gazzano, NB Gibson, M Gillon, P Gondoin, T Guillot, M Hartmann, A Hatzes, L Jorda, P Kabath, A Léger, A Llebaria, H Lammer, PJ MacQueen, M Mayor, T Mazeh, C Moutou, M Ollivier, M Pätzold, F Pepe, D Queloz, H Rauer, D Rouan, B Samuel, J Schneider, B Stecklum, B Tingley, S Udry, G Wuchterl

Photospheric activity, rotation, and star-planet interaction of the planet-hosting star CoRoT-6

Astronomy and Astrophysics 525:1 (2010)

Authors:

AF Lanza, AS Bonomo, I Pagano, G Leto, S Messina, G Cutispoto, C Moutou, S Aigrain, R Alonso, P Barge, M Deleuil, M Fridlund, A Silva-Valio, M Auvergne, A Baglin, A Collier Cameron

Abstract:

Context. The CoRoT satellite has recently discovered a hot Jupiter that transits across the disc of a F9 main-sequence star called CoRoT-6 with a period of 8.886 days. Aims. We model the photospheric activity of the star and use the maps of the active regions to study stellar differential rotation and the star-planet interaction. Methods. We apply a maximum entropy spot model to fit the optical modulation as observed by CoRoT during a uninterrupted interval of ~ 140 days. Photospheric active regions are assumed to consist of spots and faculae in a fixed proportion with solar-like contrasts. Results. Individual active regions have lifetimes up to 30-40 days. Most of them form and decay within five active longitudes whose different migration rates are attributed to the stellar differential rotation for which a lower limit of ΔΩ/Ω = 0.12 ± 0.02 is obtained. Several active regions show a maximum of activity at a longitude lagging the subplanetary point by ~ 200° with the probability of a chance occurrence being smaller than 1 percent. Conclusions. Our spot modelling indicates that the photospheric activity of CoRoT-6 could be partially modulated by some kind of star-planet magnetic interaction, while an interaction related to tides is highly unlikely because of the weakness of the tidal force. © 2010 ESO.

The Importance of Ice Vertical Resolution for Snowball Climate and Deglaciation

Journal of Climate American Meteorological Society 23:22 (2010) 6100-6109

Authors:

Dorian S Abbot, Ian Eisenman, Raymond T Pierrehumbert