Bibcode
DOI
Mandushev, Georgi; Torres, Guillermo; Latham, David W.; Charbonneau, David; Alonso, Roi; White, Russel J.; Stefanik, Robert P.; Dunham, Edward W.; Brown, Timothy M.; O'Donovan, Francis T.
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 621, Issue 2, pp. 1061-1071.
Advertised on:
3
2005
Journal
Citations
77
Refereed citations
63
Description
Wide-field searches for transiting extrasolar giant planets face the
difficult challenge of separating true transit events from the numerous
false positives caused by isolated or blended eclipsing binary systems.
We describe here the investigation of GSC 01944-02289, a very promising
candidate for a transiting brown dwarf detected by the Trans-Atlantic
Exoplanet Survey (TrES) network. The photometry and radial velocity
observations suggested that the candidate was an object of substellar
mass in orbit around an F star. However, careful analysis of the
spectral line shapes revealed a pattern of variations consistent with
the presence of another star whose motion produced the asymmetries
observed in the spectral lines of the brightest star. Detailed
simulations of blend models composed of an eclipsing binary plus a third
star diluting the eclipses were compared with the observed light curve
and used to derive the properties of the three components. Using the
predicted stellar parameters, we were able to identify a second set of
spectral lines corresponding to the primary of the eclipsing binary and
derive its spectroscopic orbit. Our photometric and spectroscopic
observations are fully consistent with a blend model of a hierarchical
triple system composed of an eclipsing binary with G0 V and M3 V
components in orbit around a slightly evolved F5 dwarf. The rotational
broadening of the spectral lines of the F5 primary (vsini~34 km
s-1) and its brightness relative to the eclipsing binary
(~89% of the total light) made the discovery of the true nature of the
system particularly difficult. We believe that this investigation will
be helpful to other groups pursuing wide-field transit searches as this
type of false detection could be more common than true transiting
planets and difficult to identify.