Dissemin is shutting down on January 1st, 2025

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American Astronomical Society, Astrophysical Journal Supplement, 2(258), p. 40, 2022

DOI: 10.3847/1538-4365/ac3a10

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ExoClock Project. II. A Large-scale Integrated Study with 180 Updated Exoplanet Ephemerides

Journal article published in 2022 by A. Wünsche, V. Školník, P. Valeau, J.-P. Vignes, K. Vora, M. Vrašťák, F. Walter, B. Wenzel, D. E. Wright, M. Zíbar, A. Kokori ORCID, A. Tsiaras ORCID, C. Aggelis, V. K. Agnihotri, C. Arena and other authors.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

Abstract The ExoClock project is an inclusive, integrated, and interactive platform that was developed to monitor the ephemerides of the Ariel targets to increase the mission efficiency. The project makes the best use of all available resources, i.e., observations from ground telescopes, midtime values from the literature, and finally, observations from space instruments. Currently, the ExoClock network includes 280 participants with telescopes capable of observing 85% of the currently known Ariel candidate targets. This work includes the results of ∼1600 observations obtained up to 2020 December 31 from the ExoClock network. These data in combination with ∼2350 midtime values collected from the literature are used to update the ephemerides of 180 planets. The analysis shows that 40% of the updated ephemerides will have an impact on future scheduling as either they have a significantly improved precision or they have revealed biases in the old ephemerides. With the new observations, the observing coverage and rate for half of the planets in the sample has been doubled or more. Finally, from a population perspective, we identify that the differences in the 2028 predictions between the old and the new ephemerides have an STD that is double what is expected from Gaussian uncertainties. These findings have implications for planning future observations, where we will need to account for drifts potentially greater than the prediction uncertainties. The updated ephemerides are open and accessible to the wider exoplanet community both from our Open Science Framework repository and our website.