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| Funder | Science and Technology Facilities Council |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | The Open University |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start Date | Sep 30, 2024 |
| End Date | Mar 30, 2028 |
| Duration | 1,277 days |
| Number of Grantees | 2 |
| Roles | Student; Supervisor |
| Data Source | UKRI Gateway to Research |
| Grant ID | 2931832 |
The Dispersed Matter Planet Project (DMPP) uses signatures of absorption by circumstellar gas to identify the probable host stars of hot rocky exoplanets for study in the coming era of exoplanetology (Haswell+2020). In our first small supersample of 6000 stars, we identified 39 bright, nearby target stars. Ourstate-of-the-art programme of high cadence, high precision
radial velocity (RV) observations has an essentially 100% record of detecting rocky exoplanets in short period orbits around them. Our first five planetary systems are DMPP-1: a compact multiplanet system, with multiple super-Earth planets orbiting a bright nearby star (Staab+2020); DMPP-2, the joint first RV discovery of a planet orbiting a strongly pulsating
star (Haswell+2020); DMPP-3 which is a ~500d eccentric binary star system hosting one or two circum-primary super-Earths (Barnes+2020, Stevenson+2023); DMPP-4 is a northern hemisphere naked-eye host star of one or more sub-Neptune mass planets; DMPP-5 is a young compact multi-planet system in the Hyades open cluster (Ross+2024) . Because the
stars were identified by the signatures of absorbing gas ablated from the close-in planets, these systems are amenable to transmission spectroscopy which can reveal the planet composition. Furthermore, angular momentum considerations suggest these planets have a high probability of transiting. Thus, potentially, our planet discoveries will yield planet masses,
radii and compositions, all with small uncertainty ranges. This paves the way for comparative exogeology. This project will exploit the rapidly growing archival holdings of uniform, high quality data from space telescopes. Gaia Data Release 3 provides precise distances and uniform high resolution spectra
covering the CaII infrared triplet for a million stars. These data are revolutionising stellar astrophysics, and make it possible to identify stars with absorbing circumstellar gas for much larger samples than we have done so far. Crucially, this will allow us to extend the Dispersed Matter Planet Project to stars at a range of ages. The Neptune
desert and the radius valley are prominent features in the demographics of short period exoplanets resulting from the loss of gaseous envelopes / atmospheres from hot planets. It seems likely that they are predominantly carved out early in the main sequence lifetime of the host star. A large-scale analysis of Gaia DR3 data for the
signatures of circumstellar absorption should allow us to quantify this planetary mass loss as a function of host star age. The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) is observing most of the bright stars in the sky, searching for transiting exoplanets. There is a huge international collaboration working through the TESS data in a uniform way. This PhD project will
complement the on-going large-scale survey data analysis. Using the proprietary DMPP target selection technique we know a priori the likely host stars of ablating, hot, rocky, transiting planets. Having only a few dozen targets rather than hundreds of thousands means we can sensibly invest significant effort in custom analysis of the
TESS data for our targets. We have already demonstrated this works, with the discovery of a transit right at the detection threshold in TESS data on DMPP-1 (Jones+2020). This work drives down the detection threshold for transits in TESS lightcurves. it is among the most shallow transits yet detected in TESS data with a dip
of only ~80 parts per million. We have a TESS guest investigator program which ensures the best possible cadence data is collected for our targets. We have secured a very significant award of CHaracterising ExOPlanet Satellite (CHEOPS) space telescope time to follow-up the DMPP-1 transit
The Open University
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