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Dr. Rabus, Markus
Nombre de publicación
Dr. Rabus, Markus
Nombre completo
Rabus, Markus
Facultad
Email
mrabus@ucsc.cl
ORCID
3 results
Research Outputs
Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
- PublicationThe TESS-Keck Survey. XVIII. A Sub-Neptune and Spurious long-period signal in the TOI-1751 system(IOP Publishing, 2024)
; ;Desai, Anmol ;Turtelboom, Emma ;Harada, Caleb ;Dressing, Courtney ;Rice, David ;Murphy, Joseph ;Brinkman, Casey ;Chontos, Ashley ;Crossfield, Ian ;Dai, Fei ;Hill, Michelle ;Fetherolf, Tara ;Giacalone, Steven ;Howard, Andrew ;Huber, Daniel ;Isaacson, Howard ;Kane, Stephen ;Lubin, Jack ;MacDougall, Mason ;Mayo, Andrew ;Močnik, Teo ;Polanski, Alex ;Rice, Malena ;Robertson, Paul ;Rubenzahl, Ryan ;Van Zandt, Judah ;Weiss, Lauren ;Bieryla, Allyson ;Buchhave, Lars ;Jenkins, Jon ;Kostov, Veselin ;Levine, Alan ;Lillo-Box, Jorge ;Paegert, M. ;Seager, S. ;Stassun, Keivan ;Ting, Eric ;Watanabe, DavidWinn, JoshuaWe present and confirm TOI-1751 b, a transiting sub-Neptune orbiting a slightly evolved, solar-type, metal-poor star (Teff = 5996 ± 110 K, log(g)=4.2 + 0.1, V = 9.3 mag, [Fe/H] = −0.40 ± 0.06 dex) every 37.47 days. We use TESS photometry to measure a planet radius of 2.77-0.07+0.15 R. We also use both Keck/HIRES and APF/Levy radial velocities (RV) to derive a planet mass of 14.5-3.14+3.15M, and thus a planet density of 3.6 ± 0.9 g cm−3. There is also a long-period (∼400 days) signal that is observed in only the Keck/HIRES data. We conclude that this long-period signal is not planetary in nature and is likely due to the window function of the Keck/HIRES observations. This highlights the role of complementary observations from multiple observatories to identify and exclude aliases in RV data. Finally, we investigate the potential compositions of this planet, including rocky and water-rich solutions, as well as theoretical irradiated ocean models. TOI-1751 b is a warm sub-Neptune with an equilibrium temperature of ∼820 K. As TOI-1751 is a metal-poor star, TOI-1751 b may have formed in a water-enriched formation environment. We thus favor a volatile-rich interior composition for this planet. - PublicationTOI-1842b: A Transiting Warm Saturn Undergoing Reinflation around an Evolving Subgiant(The Astronomical Journal, 2022)
;Wittenmyer, Robert ;Clark, Jake ;Trifonov, Trifon ;Addison, Brett ;Wright, Duncan ;Stassun, Keivan ;Horner, Jonathan ;Lowson, Nataliea ;Kielkopf, John ;Kane, Stephen ;Plavchan, Peter ;Shporer, Avi ;Zhang, Hui ;Bowler, Brendan ;Mengel, Matthew ;Okumura, Jack; ;Johnson, Marshall ;Harbeck, Daniel ;Tronsgaard, René ;Buchhave, Lars ;Collins, Karen ;Collins, Kevin ;Gan, Tianjun ;Jensen, Eric ;Howell, Steve ;Furlan, E. ;Gnilka, Crystal ;Lester, Kathryn ;Matson, Rachel ;Scott, Nicholas ;Ricker, George ;Vanderspek, Roland ;Latham, David ;Seager, S. ;Winn, Joshua ;Jenkins, Jon ;Rudat, Alexander ;Quintana, Elisa ;Rodriguez, David ;Caldwell, Douglas ;Quinn, Samuel ;Essack, ZahraBouma, LukeThe imminent launch of space telescopes designed to probe the atmospheres of exoplanets has prompted new efforts to prioritize the thousands of transiting planet candidates for follow-up characterization. We report the detection and confirmation of TOI-1842b, a warm Saturn identified by TESS and confirmed with ground-based observations from Minerva-Australis, NRES, and the Las Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope. This planet has a radius of R J, a mass of M J, an orbital period of days, and an extremely low density (? = 0.252 0.091 g cm-3). TOI-1842b has among the best known combinations of large atmospheric scale height (893 km) and host-star brightness (J = 8.747 mag), making it an attractive target for atmospheric characterization. As the host star is beginning to evolve off the main sequence, TOI-1842b presents an excellent opportunity to test models of gas giant reinflation. The primary transit duration of only 4.3 hr also makes TOI-1842b an easily-schedulable target for further ground-based atmospheric characterization. © 2022. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. - PublicationA possible alignment between the orbits of planetary systems and their visual binary companions(The Astronomical Journal, 2022)
;Christian, Sam ;Vanderburg, Andrew ;Becker, Juliette ;Yahalomi, Daniel ;Pearce, Logan ;Zhou, George ;Collins, Karen ;Kraus, Adam ;Stassun, Keivan ;Beurs, Zoe de ;Ricker, George ;Vanderspek, Roland ;Latham, David ;Winn, Joshua ;Seager, S. ;Jenkins, Jon ;Abe, Lyu ;Agabi, Karim ;Amado, Pedro ;Baker, David ;Barkaoui, Khalid ;Benkhaldoun, Zouhair ;Benni, Paul ;Berberian, John ;Berlind, Perry ;Bieryla, Allyson ;Esparza Borges, Emma ;Bowen, Michael ;Brown, Peyton ;Buchhave, Lars ;Burke, Christopher ;Buttu, Marco ;Cadieux, Charles ;Caldwell, Douglas ;Charbonneau, David ;Chazov, Nikita ;Chimaladinne, Sudhish ;Collins, Kevin ;Combs, Deven ;Conti, Dennis ;Crouzet, Nicolas ;Leon, Jerome de ;Deljookorani, Shila ;Diamond, Brendan ;Doyon, René ;Dragomir, Diana ;Dransfield, Georgina ;Essack, Zahra ;Evans, Phil ;Fukui, Akihiko ;Gan, Tianjun ;Esquerdo, Gilbert ;Gillon, Michaël ;Girardin, Eric ;Guerra, Pere ;Guillot, Tristan ;Habich, Eleanor ;Henriksen, Andreea ;Hoch, Nora ;Isogai, Keisuke ;Jehin, Emmanuël ;Jensen, Eric ;Johnson, Marshall ;Livingston, John ;Kielkopf, John ;Kim, Kingsley ;Kawauchi, Kiyoe ;Krushinsky, Vadim ;Kunzle, Veronica ;Laloum, Didier ;Leger, Dominic ;Lewin, Pablo ;Mallia, Franco ;Massey, Bob ;Mori, Mayuko ;McLeod, Kim ;Mékarnia, Djamel ;Mireles, Ismael ;Mishevskiy, Nikolay ;Tamura, Motohide ;Murgas, Felipe ;Narita, Norio ;Naves, Ramon ;Nelson, Peter ;Osborn, Hugh ;Palle, Enric ;Parviainen, Hannu ;Plavchan, Peter ;Pozuelos, Francisco; ;Relles, Howard ;Rodríguez López, Cristina ;Quinn, Samuel ;Schmider, Francois ;Schlieder, Joshua ;Schwarz, Richard ;Shporer, Avi ;Sibbald, Laurie ;Srdoc, Gregor ;Stibbards, Caitlin ;Stickler, Hannah ;Suarez, Olga ;Stockdale, Chris ;Tan, Thiam ;Terada, Yuka ;Triaud, Amaury ;Tronsgaard, Rene ;Waalkes, William ;Wang, Gavin ;Watanabe, Noriharu ;Wenceslas, Marie ;Wingham, Geof ;Wittrock, JustinZiegler, CarlAstronomers do not have a complete picture of the effects of wide-binary companions (semimajor axes greater than 100 au) on the formation and evolution of exoplanets. We investigate these effects using new data from Gaia Early Data Release 3 and the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite mission to characterize wide-binary systems with transiting exoplanets. We identify a sample of 67 systems of transiting exoplanet candidates (with well-determined, edge-on orbital inclinations) that reside in wide visual binary systems. We derive limits on orbital parameters for the wide-binary systems and measure the minimum difference in orbital inclination between the binary and planet orbits. We determine that there is statistically significant difference in the inclination distribution of wide-binary systems with transiting planets compared to a control sample, with the probability that the two distributions are the same being 0.0037. This implies that there is an overabundance of planets in binary systems whose orbits are aligned with those of the binary. The overabundance of aligned systems appears to primarily have semimajor axes less than 700 au. We investigate some effects that could cause the alignment and conclude that a torque caused by a misaligned binary companion on the protoplanetary disk is the most promising explanation.