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Published September 10, 2012 | Published
Journal Article Open

The Photoeccentric Effect and Proto-hot Jupiters. I. Measuring Photometric Eccentricities of Individual Transiting Planets

Abstract

Exoplanet orbital eccentricities offer valuable clues about the history of planetary systems. Eccentric, Jupiter-sized planets are particularly interesting: they may link the "cold" Jupiters beyond the ice line to close-in hot Jupiters, which are unlikely to have formed in situ. To date, eccentricities of individual transiting planets primarily come from radial-velocity measurements. Kepler has discovered hundreds of transiting Jupiters spanning a range of periods, but the faintness of the host stars precludes radial-velocity follow-up of most. Here, we demonstrate a Bayesian method of measuring an individual planet's eccentricity solely from its transit light curve using prior knowledge of its host star's density. We show that eccentric Jupiters are readily identified by their short ingress/egress/total transit durations—part of the "photoeccentric" light curve signature of a planet's eccentricity—even with long-cadence Kepler photometry and loosely constrained stellar parameters. A Markov Chain Monte Carlo exploration of parameter posteriors naturally marginalizes over the periapse angle and automatically accounts for the transit probability. To demonstrate, we use three published transit light curves of HD 17156 b to measure an eccentricity of e = 0.71^(+0.16)_(–0.09), in good agreement with the discovery value e = 0.67 ± 0.08 based on 33 radial-velocity measurements. We present two additional tests using Kepler data. In each case, the technique proves to be a viable method of measuring exoplanet eccentricities and their confidence intervals. Finally, we argue that this method is the most efficient, effective means of identifying the extremely eccentric, proto-hot Jupiters predicted by Socrates et al.

Additional Information

© 2012 American Astronomical Society. Received 2012 April 5; accepted 2012 July 9; published 2012 August 21. We are thankful for the helpful and positive feedback from the anonymous referee. R.I.D. gratefully acknowledges support by the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship under grant DGE-1144152, clear and constant guidance from chapter Winn (2010), and the ministry and fellowship of the Bayesian Book Club. J.A.J. thanks Avi Loeb and the ITC for hosting him as part of their visitors program, thereby allowing the authors to work together in close proximity at the CfA during the completion of this work. We thank Sarah Ballard, Zachory Berta, Joshua Carter, Courtney Dressing, Subo Dong, Daniel Fabrycky, Jonathan Irwin, Boaz Katz, David Kipping, Timothy Morton, Norman Murray, Ruth Murray-Clay, Peter Plavchan, Gregory Snyder, Aristotle Socrates, and Joshua Winn for helpful discussions. Several colleagues provided helpful and inspiring comments on a manuscript draft: Joshua Carter (who, in addition to other helpful comments, suggested the procedure described in Section 3.4), Daniel Fabrycky, Eric Ford, David Kipping, and Ruth Murray-Clay. Special thanks to J. Zachary Gazak for helpful modifications to the TAP code. This paper includes data collected by the Kepler mission. Funding for the Kepler mission is provided by the NASA Science Mission directorate. Some of the data presented in this paper were obtained from the Multimission Archive at the Space Telescope Science Institute (MAST). STScI is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under NASA contractNAS5-26555. Support for MAST for non-HST data is provided by the NASA Office of Space Science viagrant NNX09AF08G and by other grants and contracts. This research has made use of the Exoplanet Orbit Database and the Exoplanet Data Explorer at http://www.exoplanets.org.

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