searching for planets in the habitable zone. from corot to plato

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ARCHING FOR PLANETS IN THE HABITABLE ZO OM COROT TO PLATO Ennio Poretti – INAF OAB

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SEARCHING FOR PLANETS IN THE HABITABLE ZONE. FROM COROT TO PLATO. Ennio Poretti – INAF OAB. 51 Pegasi : Discovered by Mayor & Queloz (1995, Nature 378, 355). The first extrasolar planet. Wolszczan & Frail, 1992, Nature 355, 145. RADIAL VELOCITY 635 detections. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO

SEARCHING FOR PLANETS IN THE HABITABLE ZONE.

FROM COROT TO PLATO

Ennio Poretti – INAF OAB

Page 2: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO

51 Pegasi :Discovered by Mayor & Queloz(1995, Nature 378, 355)

The first extrasolar planet

Wolszczan & Frail, 1992, Nature 355, 145

Page 3: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO

RADIAL VELOCITY

635 detections

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TIMING METHOD:periodic deviations from a given

ephemeris.

The case of the pulsar PSR1257+12

(10 detections)

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MICROLENSING

(12 detections)

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ASTROMETRY (waiting for GAIA, used in KEPLER data)

Page 7: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO

Fomalhaut b : Hubble images taken 2 years apart (Kalas et al.2008)

DIRECT IMAGING (15 detections)

Page 8: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO

THE TRANSIT METHOD

Planetary massDensity

InclinationOrbital distancePlanetary radius

Using Doppler data too:

Angle between orbital plane and equatorial plane(Rossiter effect)

INFRARED:

EllipticityPhotons from planet

Spectroscopy during the transit:

Page 9: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO
Page 10: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO

0E2

CCD A1 CCD E1

CCD E2CCD A2

0E1

0A1

0A2

3.05°

2.70°

AsteroseismologyBright stars 5.5 < V < 9.52x5 in each field

Exoplanetary searchFaint stars 11.0 < V < 16.52x6000 in each field

Mission life extended to 20125 long runs (150 d each or 2x80d)10 short runs (20 - 30 d)

V = 6 --> ~2.5 104 photons cm-2 s –1

outside atmosphere , T ~ 6000°Kmv = 16 --> ~2.5 photons cm-2 s -1

CoRoTCoRoT

30°

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330°

0h2h4h6h8h10h12h14h16h18h20h22h

SummerZone of observationcentered at 18h50

WinterZone of observationcentered at 6h50

Galaxy

Page 11: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO

COROT, 30 cm mirrorV> 12 , raw data

CoRoT 1b

HUBBLE, 2.5m mirror,V=7.8, published curve

HD 209458

Page 12: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO

RESULTS

Mandel & Agol formalism

Limb-darkening quadratic law(Claret)

Using RS = 1.11±0.05 R

RP/RS= 0.1350±0.0018 RP = 1.46±0.07 RG

RP = 1.45±0.07 RG

RP = 1.44±0.07 RG

RP/RS= 0.1349±0.0015RP/RS= 0.1332±0.0008

RP/RS= 0.1334±0.0016a/RS= 4.89±0.06

sin i = 0.996±0.001tc= 2593.3263±0.0008

White light curve

Coloured light curves

COROT 1bLaurea ThesisFrancesco Borsa

Page 13: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO

CoRoT 3b: the link between stars and planets

Different depths of

the transit

RS = 1.56±0.09 R

RP = 0.78±0.07 RG

RP = 0.78±0.07 RG

RP = 0.98±0.06 RG

Stellar object !!

RP/RS= 0.0608±0.0006a/RS= 7.90±0.18

sin i= 0.998±0.001tc= 2695.5700±0.0012

P = 4.25695±0.00009d

M = 21.7±1 MJ

Deuterium burning

Laurea Thesis Francesco Borsa

Page 14: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO

LINE PROFILE VARIATIONS BY USING HARPS The fingerprint of the nonradial pulsations

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V1127 Aql: the full Blazhko effect

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Line profile variations allow us :-To separate radial modes from nonradial modes-To broke the degeneracy in m due to the rotational splitting

Mean line profile (top) and standarddeviation across the line profile(in red after removing 20 frequencies)

HD 50870

Page 17: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO

MODE IDENTIFICATION HD 50844 (l,m couples)

Inclination angle: 82°

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Power spectrum of light curve gives frequencies

Asteroseismology

Inversions + model fitting + consistent , M, , J, age:

Large separations M/R3 densitySmall separations d02

probe the core age

Uncertainty in Age ~ 10%

Uncertainty in Mass ~ 2%

Asteroseismic age of the Sun: 4.68 +/- 0.02 Gys (Houdek & Gough, 2007)

Page 20: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO

N. Batalha et al. [2011 Jan 10]

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N. Batalha, et al. [2010 Jan 11]

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Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and icy-rocky trans-neptunian bodies

Interaction between giant planets and external bodies. Increase of the angular moments of the giant planets.

INSTABILITY: Jupiter and Saturn in 2:1 resonance. Giant planets shifted outward

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25Insert footer 25

PLATOPLAnetary Transits and Oscillations of Stars

The exoplanetary system explorer

Page 26: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO

Main objective: - detect and characterize exoplanets of all kinds around stars of all

types and all ages full statistical study of formation and evolution of

exoplanetary systems- including telluric planets in the habitable zone of their host stars

Three complementary techniques:- photometric transits : Rp/Rs (Rs known thanks to Gaia)

- groundbased follow-up in radial velocity : Mp/Ms

- seismic analysis of host-stars (stellar oscillations) : Rs, Ms, age

> measurement of radius and mass, hence of planet mean density

> measurement of age of host stars, hence of planetary systems

Tool:- ultra-high precision, long, uninterrupted, CCD photometric monitoring of very

large samples of bright stars: CoRoT - Kepler heritage

- bright stars: efficient groundbased follow-up and capability of seismic analysis

PLATO Science Objectives

Page 27: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO

Instrumental Concept

- 32 « normal » cameras : cadence 25 sec- 2 « fast » cameras : cadence 2.5 sec, 2 colours- pupil 120 mm- dynamical range: 4 ≤ mV ≤ 16

optical field 37°

4 CCDs: 45102 18m

« normal » « fast »

focal planes

fully dioptric, 6 lenses + 1 window

Very wide field + large collecting area :multi-instrument approach

optical design

On board data treatment: 1 DPU /2 cameras + 1 ICU Science ground segment

Orbit around L2 Lagrangian point, 6+2 year lifetime

Page 28: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO

Concept of overlapping line of sight

4 groups of 8 cameras with offset lines of sightoffset = 0.35 x field diameter

8 8

8 8

16

16

16 16

2424

2424

32

Optimization of number of stars at given noise level AND of number of stars at given magnitude

37°

50°

Page 29: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO

30°

60°

90°

120°

150°

180°

210°

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270°

300°

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0h2h4h6h8h10h12h14h16h18h20h22h

CoRoT CoRoT

KeplerPLATO

PLATO

Basic observation strategy

very wide field + 2 successive long monitoring phases:

Page 30: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO

30°

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0h2h4h6h8h10h12h14h16h18h20h22h

KeplerPLATO

PLATO

25% of the whole sky !

CoRoT CoRoT

step and stare phase (1 year) : N fields for 3-5 months each- increase sky coverage - potential to re-visit interesting targets

- explore various stellar environments

Basic observation strategy

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30°

60°

90°

120°

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210°

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270°

300°

330°

0h2h4h6h8h10h12h14h16h18h20h22h

PLATO

PLATO

Kepler

CoRoT CoRoT

step and stare phase (2 years) : N fields for 3-5 months each- increase sky coverage - potential to re-visit interesting targets

- explore various stellar environments

42% of the whole sky !

Basic observation strategy

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The Discovery Space

Transit RV μlensing

PLATO

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Planet population predictions

Small planets expected to be very common andPLATO could monitor the 42% of the sky !

Observations Population

Synthesis?

Page 34: SEARCHING   FOR   PLANETS   IN   THE   HABITABLE   ZONE. FROM    COROT   TO    PLATO

monitor in ultra-high precision photometry

a very large number

of bright and very bright stars

The PLATO challenge

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CoRoT

Plato (2018)

Kepler

THE FUTURE OF ASTEROSEISMOLOGY AND SEARCH OF “EARTHS”

E-ELT (2017)

Combination of different techniques, from ground and space

Spectroscopy

Photometry

HARPS, HARPS-N ESPRESSO, CODEX