exoplanets
Transcription
exoplanets
The SuperWASP exoplanet transit survey Alexis Smith Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Centre, Warsaw Summary Introduction Instrumentation Observing strategy and data reduction Planet discovery process Scientific yield ● ● ● ● ● – – Exoplanets Other astrophysics The future ● – – SuperWASP related transit surveys Some context ● ● ● ● First exoplanet, 51 Peg b, discovered 1995 First transiting exoplanet, HD 209458 b, discovered in 1999, but already known by radial velocities Discovery was with small (10 cm) telescope (Charbonneau et al. 2000) Numerous projects set up to find more transiting planets... Transiting planet surveys Transiting planet surveys ● Ground-based: – Deep: ● – Wide-field: ● ● ● ● ● ● Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment (OGLE) Wide Angle Search for Planets (WASP) Hungarian Automated Telescope Network (HATNet) Trans-Atlantic Exoplanet Survey (TrES) XO Others Space-based: ● ● ● Convection Rotation & Transits (CoRoT) Kepler Sagitarius Window Eclipsing Extrasolar Planet Search (SWEEPS) * 70 of these published ** + 1000s of candidates 8 109* 49 5 5 17 23 > 100** 2 The WASP project ● Consortium of UK universities (Queen's Belfast, Keele, St Andrews, Leicester, OU, Cambridge) and Isaac Newton Group (ING) on La Palma ● PI: Don Pollacco (QUB → Warwick) ● SuperWASP-North (La Palma) 2004 ● WASP-South (Sutherland) 2006 ● ● ● Discovered a total of 109 planets to date (~70 published) Project described in Pollacco et al. (2006) www.superwasp.org My involvement in SuperWASP ● ● ● Started in 2005 when I started my PhD at St. Andrews: – Analysing noise properties of data and predicting planet yields – Follow-up photometry Keele (postdoc, 2009-12). Worked on WASP-South: – Operations – Raw data handling – Maintenance / testing trip – Planet discovery Warsaw (postdoc, 2012-). Still involved in – Some operations and raw-data handling – Follow-up photometry Enclosure & mount Fibreglass enclosure with slide-away roof ● Two rooms: – mount + cameras – computers, supplies ● Roof operated hydraulically, with battery backup as ultimate failsafe ● A single Torus fork mount – 8 cameras – 30'' RMS pointing error – <0.01'' /s tracking error ● The cameras 8 Canon 200mm f/1.8 lenses (0.11 m aperture) 2048 x 2048 pixel CCD cameras (Andor, Belfast), Peltier cooled to -50 ºC Focus is temperature dependent – active focus control (S) / heated lenses (N) Field-of-view 7.8º x 7.8º ● ● ● ● – 1 exposure (8 cams) images ~1% of whole sky The weather station Detectors for: ● – – – ● ● ● Rain Cloud cover Wind speed & direction Webcam Satellite feed for lightning / storm info Allows rapid automatic closing of roof Operations Live 'status' webpage: ● – – – – ● Weather Webcams Latest science images Instrument status Weather info regularly used by other observers at SAAO Observing strategy ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ~12 fields observed per night in a strip of declination 2 x 30 s exposures per pointing Variable cadence, but typically ~10 minutes Photometry for 9.5 < V < 13 Fields followed for ~5 months Avoid galactic plane (over-crowded) Greatest coverage is of equatorial region (observed by both North and South) A typical image ● ● Up to 100,000 stars per image Big pixels! 13'' / pixel Raw data back to Keele / QUB A full night of data is up to 1000 images per camera ● Each image is ~ 8 Mb (compressed to ~5 Mb) ● ~40 Gb to transfer for each good night ● SuperWASP-N (La Palma) use internet ● Connection at Sutherland poor, so use data tapes / HDDs – returned every 4 – 6 weeks ● Raw (and processed) data stored in archive at Leicester (moving to Warwick this week!) – 7.7 million raw images (from North and South) – ~60 Tb of raw data in archive ● Data processing ● ● ● ● ● Data are read from HDD and checked Images are calibrated Astrometric solution using USNO-B1.0 catalogue – V < 14 Aperture photometry V < 13 Processed data sent to archive... The archive ● ● 429 billion data points 31 million unique objects Hunting for transits Data de-trended using SysRem and TFA algorithms (Tamuz et al. 2005, Kovács et al. 2005) BLS transit search run on complete seasons of data A webpage is automatically generated on each planet candidate Various metrics used to filter best candidates Candidates 'eyeballed' by human(s) Candidates may be: ● ● ● ● ● ● – – – Rejected as junk – 'transit' obviously noise, or nonplanetary Saved for later – more WASP data needed to decide Sent for follow-up observations – RV and/or photometry An example candidate page An example candidate page An example candidate page Follow-up observations Need radial velocities to confirm planetary mass A single spectrum may rule out giant stars, fast rotators, etc Transit photometry with larger (~ 1 m) telescopes to ● ● ● – – determine which object is responsible for transit give more precise system parameters for discovery paper WASP-36b Smith et al. (2012) Follow-up observations Need radial velocities to confirm planetary mass A single spectrum may rule out giant stars, fast rotators, etc Transit photometry with larger (~ 1 m) telescopes to ● ● ● – – determine which object is responsible for transit give more precise system parameters for discovery paper WASP-36b Smith et al. (2012) Photometric follow-up Use a range of telescopes, most commonly ● – – – – – – TRAPPIST – 0.6 m robotic @ La Silla Euler – 1.2 m @ La Silla Liverpool – 2 m robotic @ ORM, La Palma Faulkes Telescope North – 2 m @ Haleakala, Maui Faulkes Telescope South – 2 m @ Siding Springs UK university telescopes ● ● Keele 0.6 m James Gregory Telescope – 1 m @ St Andrews Radial velocity follow-up ● ● ● ● ● CORALIE on 1.2-m Swiss Euler HARPS on ESO 3.6-m SOPHIE on OHP 1.93-m Most candidates turn out to be lowmass / grazing / diluted Ebs 'Hit rate' is ~ 1 in 12 candidates → planets – This could be improved, but we often send 'high risk, high reward' candidates – small planets, etc Combined MCMC data analysis: e.g WASP-71b Smith et al. (2013) Scientific highlights: exoplanets First planets: WASP-1b and WASP-2b (Collier Cameron et al. 2007) ● Total of 109 planets discovered, 70 are published (rest awaiting data, papers in preparation) ● WASP-12b – a very hot Jupiter – Hebb et al. (2009) – 1.1 d orbit around a G0 dwarf – atmosphere 'well' characterised – first carbon-rich planet? ● K-band occultation (CFHT): Croll et al. (2011) C-O ratio > 1: Madhusudhan et al. (2011) Scientific highlights: exoplanets ● WASP-17b – a huge planet, and the first with a retrograde orbit (discovery: Anderson et al. 2010) – radius 2.0 RJ – far bigger than any theory predicts – Rossiter-McLaughlin effect reveals orbit is retrograde w.r.t. stellar-spin axis Anderson et al. (2011) Triaud et al. (2010) Scientific highlights: exoplanets ● WASP-33 – first planet discovered around an A-star (Collier Cameron et al. – confirmed (in retrograde orbit) with line-profile tomography – star is a δ Scuti pulsator – hottest-known planet (Smith et al. 2011) Scientific highlights: other ● ● Variable stars and EBs – Short-period EBs (Norton et al. 2011, Lohr et al. 2012, 2013) – Variables coincident with ROSAT X-ray sources (Norton et al. 2007) – Long timescale photometry of CVs (Thomas et al. 2010) – Pulsations of Am stars (Smalley et al. 2011) – Oscillations in roAp stars (Elkin et al. 2011) SuperWASP data are available for you to use in your science! – Unfortunately public archive no longer funded, but may re-appear – In the meantime, you can contact a member of WASP to get data Scientific highlights: other ● Variable stars and EBs – Short-period EBs (Norton et al. 2011, Lohr et al. 2012, 2013) – Variables coincident with ROSAT X-ray sources (Norton et al. 2007) – Long timescale photometry of CVs (Thomas et al. 2010) – Pulsations of Am stars (Smalley et al. 2011) – Oscillations in roAp stars (Elkin et al. 2011) The future: post-Kepler ● ● ● ● Kepler has discovered > 100 planets, with thousands more candidates (Morton & Johnson 2011 estimate > 90% are true planets) – These include planets much smaller and with much longer periods than found from the ground – But, Kepler only observed a single field, and most targets are faint (~14th – 15th mag) The era of ground-based transit surveys is NOT over! Wide-field surveys find intrinsically rare objects (WASP-17b) There is a need for exoplanets for characterisation that: – Orbit bright stars – Are distributed across sky (e.g. southern objects for EELT) The future of SuperWASP ● ● ● ● ● SuperWASP-N: trialling observing fewer fields per night, with higher cadence WASP-South: trialling wider-angle lenses to change magnitude 'sweet spot' from 9.5 < V < 13 to 7 < V < 10 Motivation: planet host stars HD 209458 (V = 7.6) and HD 189733 (V = 7.7) are both in Northern hemisphere. These are best-studied transiting planets, almost all new observing techniques tried on these objects first. An 8th mag transiting HJ visible from VLT would be a very valuable discovery! Implementation: Canon 85 mm f/1.2 lenses: f.o.v. 18º x 18º, pixel scale 31'' / pixel. 1 year of data with 85 mm lenses: reduction in progress The future of SuperWASP ● ● ● ● ● SuperWASP-N: trialling observing fewer fields per night, with higher cadence WASP-South: trialling wider-angle lenses to change magnitude 'sweet spot' from 9.5 < V < 13 to 7 < V < 10 Motivation: planet host stars HD 209458 (V = 7.6) and HD 189733 (V = 7.7) are both in Northern hemisphere. These are best-studied transiting planets, almost all new observing techniques tried on these objects first. An 8th mag transiting HJ visible from VLT would be a very valuable discovery! Implementation: Canon 85 mm f/1.2 lenses: f.o.v. 18º x 18º, pixel scale 31'' / pixel. 1 year of data with 85 mm lenses: reduction in progress Future related surveys: QES ● ● ● ● ● SuperWASP expertise also feeding into other transit survey projects. Qatar Exoplanet Survey (QES) operating 4 x 400 mm lenses (5º x 5º f.o.v.) in New Mexico. Funding secured from Qatar National Research Fund for additional stations. Goal: to go fainter than SuperWASP, DIA photometry, longitude coverage Uses WASP legacy in pipeline, archive, etc Two exoplanets discovered to date: Qatar-1b (Alsubai et al. 2011), Qatar-2b (Bryan et al. 2011) Next Generation Transit Survey (NGTS) ● See: – Wheatley et al. 2013 – www.ngtransits.org Thanks for listening! Time lapse movie: Willie Koorts (SAAO)