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Predictable Patterns in Planetary Transit Timing Variations and Transit Duration Variations Due to ExomoonsWe present new ways to identify single and multiple moons around extrasolar planets using planetary transit timing variations (TTVs) and transit duration variations (TDVs). For planets with one moon, measurements from successive transits exhibit a hitherto undescribed pattern in the TTV-TDV diagram, originating from the stroboscopic sampling of the planet's orbit around the planet-moon barycenter. This pattern is fully determined and analytically predictable after three consecutive transits. The more measurements become available, the more the TTV-TDV diagram approaches an ellipse. For planets with multiple moons in orbital mean motion resonance (MMR), like the Galilean moon system, the pattern is much more complex and addressed numerically in this report. Exomoons in MMR can also form closed, predictable TTV-TDV figures, as long as the drift of the moons' pericenters is suciently slow.We find that MMR exomoons produce loops in the TTV-TDV diagram and that the number of these loops is equal to the order of the MMR, or the largest integer in the MMR ratio.We use a Bayesian model and Monte Carlo simulations to test the discoverability of exomoons using TTV-TDV diagrams with current and near-future technology. In a blind test, two of us (BP, DA) successfully retrieved a large moon from simulated TTV-TDV by co-authors MH and RH, which resembled data from a known Kepler planet candidate. Single exomoons with a 10 percent moon-to-planet mass ratio, like to Pluto-Charon binary, can be detectable in the archival data of the Kepler primary mission. Multi-exomoon systems, however, require either larger telescopes or brighter target stars. Complementary detection methods invoking a moon's own photometric transit or its orbital sampling effect can be used for validation or falsification. A combination of TESS, CHEOPS, and PLATO data would offer a compelling opportunity for an exomoon discovery around a bright star.
Document ID
20160011119
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Heller, Rene
(Max-Planck Inst. for Solar System Research Germany)
Hippke, Michael
Placek, Ben
(Schenectady County Community College Schenectady, NY, United States)
Angerhausen, Daniel
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD United States)
Agol, Eric
(Washington Univ. Seattle, WA, United States)
Date Acquired
September 7, 2016
Publication Date
June 16, 2016
Publication Information
Publication: Astronomy & Astrophysics
Publisher: ESO
Volume: 591
e-ISSN: 1432-0746
Subject Category
Astronomy
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration
Report/Patent Number
GSFC-E-DAA-TN35316
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNX13AF62G
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNX13AF20G
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNH15CO48B
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNH05ZDA001C
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
stroboscopic sampling
transit duration variations (TDVs)
transit timing variations (TTVs)

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