2014A&A...569A..89M


Query : 2014A&A...569A..89M

2014A&A...569A..89M - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 569A, 89-89 (2014/9-1)

Herschel/PACS photometry of transiting-planet host stars with candidate warm debris disks.

MERIN B., ARDILA D.R., RIBAS A., BOUY H., BRYDEN G., STAPELFELDT K. and PADGETT D.

Abstract (from CDS):

Dust in debris disks is produced by colliding or evaporating planetesimals, which are remnants of the planet formation process. Warm dust disks, known by their emission at ≤24µm, are rare (4% of FGK main sequence stars) and especially interesting because they trace material in the region likely to host terrestrial planets, where the dust has a very short dynamical lifetime. Statistical analyses of the source counts of excesses as found with the mid-IR Wide Field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) suggest that warm-dust candidates found for the Kepler transiting-planet host-star candidates can be explained by extragalactic or galactic background emission aligned by chance with the target stars. These statistical analyses do not exclude the possibility that a given WISE excess could be due to a transient dust population associated with the target. Here we report Herschel/PACS 100 and 160 micron follow-up observations of a sample of Kepler and non-Kepler transiting-planet candidates' host stars, with candidate WISE warm debris disks, aimed at detecting a possible cold debris disk in any one of them. No clear detections were found in any one of the objects at either wavelength. Our upper limits confirm that most objects in the sample do not have a massive debris disk like that in β Pic. We also show that the planet-hosting star WASP-33 does not have a debris disk comparable to the one around η Crv. Although the data cannot be used to rule out rare warm disks around the Kepler planet-hosting candidates, the lack of detections and the characteristics of neighboring emission found at far-IR wavelengths support an earlier result suggesting that most of the WISE-selected IR excesses around Kepler candidate host stars are likely due to either chance alignment with background IR-bright galaxies and/or to interstellar emission.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): planetary systems - planets and satellites: dynamical evolution and stability

Simbad objects: 33

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Number of rows : 33
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2023
#notes
1 HAT-P-28 * 00 52 00.1876130976 +34 43 42.205232532   13.4   13.24   ~ 25 1
2 HD 15082 dS* 02 26 51.0582618096 +37 33 01.736482032   8.41 8.14     kA5hA8mF4 186 1
3 * alf Lyr dS* 18 36 56.33635 +38 47 01.2802 0.03 0.03 0.03 0.07 0.10 A0Va 2656 1
4 Kepler-601 Ro* 18 48 01.1082825024 +42 10 35.425755120           K1 38 0
5 Kepler-829 Ro* 18 49 19.8683452032 +42 27 49.762694664           G8 24 0
6 Kepler-511 Er* 18 51 46.9662649008 +47 34 29.595822744   13.471 12.723 12.589   G0 46 0
7 KOI-559 * 18 53 53.0641064400 +41 52 23.343511332           K0 15 0
8 Kepler-721 Ro* 18 57 43.3208235192 +44 28 49.792897956           K1 29 0
9 KOI-2083 ** 18 57 57.6763193064 +42 38 53.821694868   14.019 13.563 13.425   G0 31 0
10 KOI-466 Ro* 19 04 36.4814421576 +45 19 57.311590692           G1 37 0
11 Kepler-121 Er* 19 04 38.8956870840 +39 40 40.857554856   15.913 14.863 14.781   K0 36 0
12 Kepler-473 Er* 19 06 31.2218679768 +38 56 44.079004068       13.408   ~ 39 0
13 Kepler-790 Ro* 19 07 40.1096012784 +38 52 19.970277132           K1 26 0
14 Kepler-510 Er* 19 10 37.1971512528 +39 14 39.414057504   12.84 12.07 11.987   G5V 55 0
15 KOI-469 Er* 19 14 33.0882979224 +46 25 17.212893888   15.601 14.887 14.772   G0 33 0
16 Kepler-219 Er* 19 14 57.3495104640 +46 45 45.290906784   14.594 13.899 13.701   G2V 57 0
17 KOI-1582 Er* 19 20 30.8563146672 +40 01 18.542935560   16.458 15.513 15.295   G9 31 0
18 Kepler-570 Ro* 19 21 45.0247625808 +48 47 30.789172824           ~ 28 0
19 Kepler-833 Ro* 19 21 55.1903805408 +45 36 02.430630468           M0V 31 0
20 CoRoT-10 V* 19 24 15.2869439208 +00 44 46.002641280   16.676 15.216 15.48 13.64 K1V 36 1
21 Kepler-767 Ro* 19 26 18.9989722872 +38 02 08.994135372           G6 32 0
22 KOI-1032 EB* 19 27 54.6116206152 +37 31 57.103004748   15.288 14.128 13.844   K2 40 0
23 KOI-1177 EB* 19 28 18.8377855584 +38 37 53.305390776       15.837   G9 23 0
24 Kepler-215 Er* 19 39 53.6402937048 +45 12 49.220709192   14.273 13.736 13.636   ~ 63 0
25 Kepler-624 Ro* 19 40 46.4066678568 +39 32 22.801755552           F7IV 40 0
26 Kepler-590 Ro* 19 45 32.5297157256 +48 14 00.361018572           ~ 26 0
27 Kepler-1008 Ro* 19 46 11.4122878440 +44 56 30.870167784           K2 34 0
28 Kepler-655 Ro* 19 49 02.1903375672 +46 50 35.536709292           F6V 37 0
29 Kepler-367 Er* 19 49 10.1869020984 +49 58 53.925376440   14.219 13.149 12.923   K3V 48 0
30 Kepler-1004 Er* 19 49 26.2388556720 +49 47 51.092808252   14.873 13.707 13.479   ~ 35 0
31 KOI-1701 EB* 19 50 04.5662005008 +42 46 37.462512756   11.274 11.054 11.036   Am 24 0
32 Kepler-536 Ro* 19 50 56.7370297968 +49 38 13.814596608           ~ 37 0
33 WASP-46 EB* 21 14 56.8598669520 -55 52 18.458085144   13.0   13.06 12.29 G6 43 1

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2023.10.05-04:09:47

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