Site Map
Contacts
Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter YouTube channel
Centro de Astrofísica da Universidade do Porto
The physical properties of giant transiting exoplanets within 400 days

Alexandre Santerne
CAUP

Abstract
The Kepler space telescope has observed hundred of thousands of stars continuously during the four years of the prime mission. It has detected thousands of potential transiting planets up to 1AU and down to the size of the Earth. These detections provide new constraints to the theories of planet formation, migration, and evolution, at a level never reached before. However, transit signals could be mimicked by other, non-planetary scenarios. These other scenarios, the so-called false positives, bias the physical properties of exoplanets derived from the transit detections and thus, they might lead us to wrong conclusions. To secure these planet detections, two main techniques are used: the velocimetric and statistical validation methods. In this seminar, I will first present the astrophysical motivations of finding (transiting) exoplanets and the limitations raised by the presence of false positives. I will then describe the two main solutions I'm using to overcome these limits. This will be illustrated by the recent results achieved thanks to a 5 year large programme with the SOPHIE spectrograph at Observatoire de Haute-Provence (France). This spectroscopic programme allowed us to derive unbiased statistical properties of giant transiting exoplanets within 400 days. I will conclude the seminar by presenting my Marie Curie project in the context of the (bright) future of the exoplanet thematic.

15 October 2014, 13:30

Centro de Astrofísica
Rua das Estrelas
4150-762 Porto

Institute of Astrophysics and Space Sciences

Institute of Astrophysics and Space Sciences (IA) is a new but long anticipated research infrastructure with a national dimension. It embodies a bold but feasible vision for the development of Astronomy, Astrophysics and Space Sciences in Portugal, taking full advantage and fully realizing the potential created by the national membership of the European Space Agency (ESA) and the European Southern Observatory (ESO). IA resulted from the merging the two most prominent research units in the field in Portugal: the Centre for Astrophysics of the University of Porto (CAUP) and the Center for Astronomy and Astrophysics of the University of Lisbon (CAAUL). It currently hosts more than two-thirds of all active researchers working in Space Sciences in Portugal, and is responsible for an even greater fraction of the national productivity in international ISI journals in the area of Space Sciences. This is the scientific area with the highest relative impact factor (1.65 times above the international average) and the field with the highest average number of citations per article for Portugal.

Proceed on CAUP's website|Go to IA website