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Published April 1, 2015 | Published
Journal Article Open

Measurement of Planet Masses with Transit Timing Variations Due to Synodic "Chopping" Effects

Abstract

Gravitational interactions between planets in transiting exoplanetary systems lead to variations in the times of transit that are diagnostic of the planetary masses and the dynamical state of the system. Here we show that synodic "chopping" contributions to these transit timing variations (TTVs) can be used to uniquely measure the masses of planets without full dynamical analyses involving direct integration of the equations of motion. We present simple analytic formulae for the chopping signal, which are valid (generally ≤10% error) for modest eccentricities e ≾ 0.1. Importantly, these formulae primarily depend on the mass of the perturbing planet, and therefore the chopping signal can be used to break the mass/free-eccentricity degeneracy, which can appear for systems near first-order mean motion resonances. Using a harmonic analysis, we apply these TTV formulae to a number of Kepler systems, which had been previously modeled with full dynamical analyses. We show that when chopping is measured, the masses of both planets can be determined uniquely, in agreement with previous results, but without the need for numerical orbit integrations. This demonstrates how mass measurements from TTVs may primarily arise from an observable chopping signal. The formula for chopping can also be used to predict the number of transits and timing precision required for future observations, such as those made by TESS or PLATO, in order to infer planetary masses through analysis of TTVs.

Additional Information

© 2015 American Astronomical Society. Received 2014 October 28; accepted 2015 January 21; published 2015 April 1. We would like to thank the referee, David Nesvorný, for helping us to clarify the text, and we would also like to thank Dan Fabrycky, Eric Ford, Matt Holman, Daniel Jontof-Hutter, Jack Lissauer, Jason Steffen, and the Kepler TTV group for helpful conversations. E.A. acknowledges funding by NSF Career Grant AST 0645416, NASA Astrobiology Institute's Virtual Planetary Laboratory, supported by NASA under cooperative agreement NNH05ZDA001C, and NASA through grants NNX13AF20G, NNX13AF62G, and an award issued by JPL/Caltech. K.M.D. acknowledges support from JCPA fellowship at Caltech. Work by K.M.D. during the summer of 2014 was supported by NASA under grant NNX09AB28G from the Kepler Participating Scientist Program and grants NNX09AB33G and NNX13A124G under the Origins program.

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