Publication | Closed Access
Transiting planet search in the Kepler pipeline
217
Citations
18
References
2010
Year
Astronomical Coordinate SystemEngineeringAstrostatisticsSpace Mission DesignAstrodynamicsKepler Flight DataPlanetary ExplorationAstronomical Image AnalysisKepler MissionExtrasolar SystemAstroinformaticsKepler PipelineWavelet TheorySignal ProcessingSuper-resolution Detection StatisticsAstrophysics
The Kepler Mission simultaneously measures the brightness of more than 160,000 stars every 29.4 minutes over a 3.5-year mission to search for transiting planets. Detecting transits is a signal-detection problem where the signal of interest is a periodic pulse train and the predominant noise source is non-white, non-stationary (1/f) type process of stellar variability. Many stars also exhibit coherent or quasi-coherent oscillations. The detection algorithm first identifies and removes strong oscillations followed by an adaptive, wavelet-based matched filter. We discuss how we obtain super-resolution detection statistics and the effectiveness of the algorithm for Kepler flight data.
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