@phdthesis{Dominis2006, author = {Dominis, Dijana}, title = {The role of binary stars in searches for extrasolar planets by microlensing and astrometry}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-10814}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, year = {2006}, abstract = {When Galactic microlensing events of stars are observed, one usually measures a symmetric light curve corresponding to a single lens, or an asymmetric light curve, often with caustic crossings, in the case of a binary lens system. In principle, the fraction of binary stars at a certain separation range can be estimated based on the number of measured microlensing events. However, a binary system may produce a light curve which can be fitted well as a single lens light curve, in particullary if the data sampling is poor and the errorbars are large. We investigate what fraction of microlensing events produced by binary stars for different separations may be well fitted by and hence misinterpreted as single lens events for various observational conditions. We find that this fraction strongly depends on the separation of the binary components, reaching its minimum at between 0.6 and 1.0 Einstein radius, where it is still of the order of 5\% The Einstein radius is corresponding to few A.U. for typical Galactic microlensing scenarios. The rate for misinterpretation is higher for short microlensing events lasting up to few months and events with smaller maximum amplification. For fixed separation it increases for binaries with more extreme mass ratios. Problem of degeneracy in photometric light curve solution between binary lens and binary source microlensing events was studied on simulated data, and data observed by the PLANET collaboration. The fitting code BISCO using the PIKAIA genetic algorithm optimizing routine was written for optimizing binary-source microlensing light curves observed at different sites, in I, R and V photometric bands. Tests on simulated microlensing light curves show that BISCO is successful in finding the solution to a binary-source event in a very wide parameter space. Flux ratio method is suggested in this work for breaking degeneracy between binary-lens and binary-source photometric light curves. Models show that only a few additional data points in photometric V band, together with a full light curve in I band, will enable breaking the degeneracy. Very good data quality and dense data sampling, combined with accurate binary lens and binary source modeling, yielded the discovery of the lowest-mass planet discovered outside of the Solar System so far, OGLE-2005-BLG-390Lb, having only 5.5 Earth masses. This was the first observed microlensing event in which the degeneracy between a planetary binary-lens and an extreme flux ratio binary-source model has been successfully broken. For events OGLE-2003-BLG-222 and OGLE-2004-BLG-347, the degeneracy was encountered despite of very dense data sampling. From light curve modeling and stellar evolution theory, there was a slight preference to explain OGLE-2003-BLG-222 as a binary source event, and OGLE-2004-BLG-347 as a binary lens event. However, without spectra, this degeneracy cannot be fully broken. No planet was found so far around a white dwarf, though it is believed that Jovian planets should survive the late stages of stellar evolution, and that white dwarfs will retain planetary systems in wide orbits. We want to perform high precision astrometric observations of nearby white dwarfs in wide binary systems with red dwarfs in order to find planets around white dwarfs. We selected a sample of observing targets (WD-RD binary systems, not published yet), which can possibly have planets around the WD component, and modeled synthetic astrometric orbits which can be observed for these targets using existing and future astrometric facilities. Modeling was performed for the astrometric accuracy of 0.01, 0.1, and 1.0 mas, separation between WD and planet of 3 and 5 A.U., binary system separation of 30 A.U., planet masses of 10 Earth masses, 1 and 10 Jupiter masses, WD mass of 0.5M and 1.0 Solar masses, and distances to the system of 10, 20 and 30 pc. It was found that the PRIMA facility at the VLTI will be able to detect planets around white dwarfs once it is operating, by measuring the astrometric wobble of the WD due to a planet companion, down to 1 Jupiter mass. We show for the simulated observations that it is possible to model the orbits and find the parameters describing the potential planetary systems.}, subject = {Mikrogravitationslinseneffekt}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Mallonn2014, author = {Mallonn, Matthias}, title = {Ground-based transmission spectroscopy of three inflated Hot Jupiter exoplanets}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-74403}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {ix, 115}, year = {2014}, abstract = {The characterization of exoplanets is a young and rapidly expanding field in astronomy. It includes a method called transmission spectroscopy that searches for planetary spectral fingerprints in the light received from the host star during the event of a transit. This techniques allows for conclusions on the atmospheric composition at the terminator region, the boundary between the day and night side of the planet. Observationally a big challenge, first attempts in the community have been successful in the detection of several absorption features in the optical wavelength range. These are for example a Rayleighscattering slope and absorption by sodium and potassium. However, other objects show a featureless spectrum indicative for a cloud or haze layer of condensates masking the probable atmospheric layers. In this work, we performed transmission spectroscopy by spectrophotometry of three Hot Jupiter exoplanets. When we began the work on this thesis, optical transmission spectra have been available for two exoplanets. Our main goal was to advance the current sample of probed objects to learn by comparative exoplanetology whether certain absorption features are common. We selected the targets HAT-P-12b, HAT-P-19b and HAT-P-32b, for which the detection of atmospheric signatures is feasible with current ground-based instrumentation. In addition, we monitored the host stars of all three objects photometrically to correct for influences of stellar activity if necessary. The obtained measurements of the three objects all favor featureless spectra. A variety of atmospheric compositions can explain the lack of a wavelength dependent absorption. But the broad trend of featureless spectra in planets of a wide range of temperatures, found in this work and in similar studies recently published in the literature, favors an explanation based on the presence of condensates even at very low concentrations in the atmospheres of these close-in gas giants. This result points towards the general conclusion that the capability of transmission spectroscopy to determine the atmospheric composition is limited, at least for measurements at low spectral resolution. In addition, we refined the transit parameters and ephemerides of HAT-P-12b and HATP- 19b. Our monitoring campaigns allowed for the detection of the stellar rotation period of HAT-P-19 and a refined age estimate. For HAT-P-12 and HAT-P-32, we derived upper limits on their potential variability. The calculated upper limits of systematic effects of starspots on the derived transmission spectra were found to be negligible for all three targets. Finally, we discussed the observational challenges in the characterization of exoplanet atmospheres, the importance of correlated noise in the measurements and formulated suggestions on how to improve on the robustness of results in future work.}, language = {en} }