4.6 Article

VaTEST. II. Statistical Validation of 11 TESS-detected Exoplanets Orbiting K-type Stars

Journal

ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 166, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/acd548

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NASA's TESS mission has identified over 329 transiting exoplanets and remains with nearly 6000 unvalidated candidates. In this study, the VaTEST project successfully validated 11 new exoplanets using statistical tools. These validated planets include ones suitable for atmospheric characterization using transmission or emission spectroscopy. The study also identifies five potential planet candidates for further investigation.
NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) is an all-sky survey mission designed to find transiting exoplanets orbiting nearby bright stars. It has identified more than 329 transiting exoplanets, and almost 6000 candidates remain unvalidated. In this manuscript, we discuss the findings from the ongoing Validation of Transiting Exoplanets using Statistical Tools (VaTEST) project, which aims to validate new exoplanets for further characterization. We validated 11 new exoplanets by examining the light curves of 24 candidates using the LATTE and TESS-Plot tools and computing the false-positive probabilities using the statistical validation tool TRICERATOPS. These include planets suitable for atmospheric characterization using transmission spectroscopy (TOI-2194b), emission spectroscopy (TOI-3082b and TOI-5704b) and for both transmission and emission spectroscopy (TOI-672b, TOI-1694b, and TOI-2443b). Our validated planets have one super-Earth (TOI-2194b) orbiting a bright (V = 8.42 mag), metal-poor ([Fe/H] = -0.3720 +/- 0.1) star, and one short-period Neptune-like planet (TOI-5704) in the hot-Neptune desert. In total, we validated one super-Earth, seven sub-Neptunes, one Neptune-like, and two sub-Saturn or super-Neptune-like exoplanets. Additionally, we identify five likely planet candidates (TOI-323, TOI-1180, TOI-2200, TOI-2408, and TOI-3913), which can be further studied to establish their planetary nature.

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