MEASURING TRANSIT SIGNAL RECOVERY IN THE KEPLER PIPELINE. I. INDIVIDUAL EVENTS
Autor: | Jessie L. Christiansen, Bruce D. Clarke, Christopher J. Burke, Jon M. Jenkins, Thomas S. Barclay, Eric B. Ford, Michael R. Haas, Anima Sabale, Shawn Seader, Jeffrey Claiborne Smith, Peter Tenenbaum, Joseph D. Twicken, Akm Kamal Uddin, Susan E. Thompson |
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Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: |
Earth and Planetary Astrophysics (astro-ph.EP)
Physics education.field_of_study Pixel Spacecraft business.industry Population FOS: Physical sciences Perturbation (astronomy) Astronomy and Astrophysics Stars Cardinal point Space and Planetary Science Planet Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics business education Algorithm Circumstellar habitable zone Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics |
Zdroj: | The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series. 207:35 |
ISSN: | 1538-4365 0067-0049 |
Popis: | The Kepler Mission was designed to measure the frequency of Earth-size planets in the habitable zone of Sun-like stars. A crucial component for recovering the underlying planet population from a sample of detected planets is understanding the completeness of that sample - what fraction of the planets that could have been discovered in a given data set were actually detected. Here we outline the information required to determine the sample completeness, and describe an experiment to address a specific aspect of that question, which is the issue of transit signal recovery. We investigate the extent to which the Kepler pipeline preserves individual transit signals by injecting simulated transits into the pixel-level data, processing the modified pixels through the pipeline, and comparing the measured transit signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) to that expected without perturbation by the pipeline. We inject simulated transit signals across the full focal plane for a set of observations of length 89 days. On average, we find that the SNR of the injected signal is recovered at MS = 0.9973(+/-0.0012)xBS-0.0151(+/-0.0049), where MS is the measured SNR and BS is the baseline, or expected, SNR. The 1{\sigma} width of the distribution around this correlation is +/-2.64%. We discuss the pipeline processes that cause the measured SNR to deviate significantly from the baseline SNR; these are primarily the handling of data adjacent to spacecraft re-pointings and the removal of harmonics prior to the measurement of the SNR. Finally we outline the further work required to characterise the completeness of the Kepler pipeline. Comment: 40 pages, 18 figures, submitted to ApJ |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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