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A&A 450, 395-398 (2006)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20054555
Possibility of a photometric detection of "exomoons"
Gy. M. Szabó1, 2, K. Szatmáry1, Zs. Divéki1 and A. Simon11 Department of Experimental Physics & Astronomical Observatory, University of Szeged, 6720 Szeged, Hungary
e-mail: szgy@titan.physx.u-szeged.hu
2 visitor at the Harvard-Smithsonian CfA, Cambridge, MA
(Received 29 November 2005 / Accepted 15 December 2005)
Abstract
Aims.
We examined which exo-systems contain moons that
may be detected in transit.
Methods.
We numerically modeled transit light curves of Earth-like and giant planets
that cointain moons with 0.005-0.4 Earth-mass.
The orbital parameters were randomly
selected, but the entire system fulfilled Hill-stability.
Results.
We conclude that the timing effect is caused by two scenarios:
the motion of the planet and the moon around the barycenter.
Which one dominates depends on the parameters of the system.
Already planned missions (Kepler, COROT) may be able to
detect the moon in transiting extrasolar Earth-Moon-like systems with a 20% probability.
From our sample of 500 free-designed systems, 8 could be detected with
the photometric accuracy of 0.1 mmag and a 1 min sampling, and one
contains a stony planet. With ten times better accuracy, 51 detections
are expected. All such systems orbit far from the central star, with the orbital
periods at least 200 and 10 days for the planet and the moon, while
they contain K- and M-dwarf stars. Finally we estimate that a few number of real detections can be expected by the end of the COROT and
the Kepler missions.
Key words: stars: planetary systems -- techniques: photometric
© ESO 2006
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