4.6 Article

Zodiacal Exoplanets in Time (ZEIT). V. A Uniform Search for Transiting Planets in Young Clusters Observed by K2

Journal

ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 154, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/aa9070

Keywords

methods: data analysis; open clusters and associations: general; planetary systems; planets and satellites: detections; planets and satellites: dynamical evolution and stability; stars: pre-main sequence

Funding

  1. NASA Science Mission directorate
  2. University of Texas at Austin
  3. US National Science Foundation [AST-1229522]
  4. NASA K2 Guest Observer Cycle 4 grant [NNX17AF71G]
  5. NASA Hubble Fellowship - Space Telescope Science Institute [51364]
  6. NASA [NAS 5-26555]
  7. NASA through the Sagan Fellowship Program
  8. Korean GMT Project of KASI
  9. NASA [NNX17AF71G, 1002165] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Detection of transiting exoplanets around young stars is more difficult than for older systems owing to increased stellar variability. Nine young open cluster planets have been found in the K2 data, but no single analysis pipeline identified all planets. We have developed a transit search pipeline for young stars that uses a transit-shaped notch and quadratic continuum in a 12 or 24 hr window to fit both the stellar variability and the presence of a transit. In addition, for the most rapid rotators (P-rot < 2 days) we model the variability using a linear combination of observed rotations of each star. To maximally exploit our new pipeline, we update the membership for four stellar populations observed by K2 (Upper Scorpius, Pleiades, Hyades, Praesepe) and conduct a uniform search of the members. We identify all known transiting exoplanets in the clusters, 17 eclipsing binaries, one transiting planet candidate orbiting a potential Pleiades member, and three orbiting unlikely members of the young clusters. Limited injection recovery testing on the known planet hosts indicates that for the older Praesepe systems we are sensitive to additional exoplanets as small as 1-2 R-circle plus, and for the larger Upper Scorpius planet host (K2-33) our pipeline is sensitive to similar to 4 R-circle plus transiting planets. The lack of detected multiple systems in the young clusters is consistent with the expected frequency from the original Kepler sample, within our detection limits. With a robust pipeline that detects all known planets in the young clusters, occurrence rate testing at young ages is now possible.

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