ITC Colloquium - Scott Gaudi (Ohio State)

Date: 

Thursday, March 30, 2017, 11:00am to 12:00pm

Location: 

Pratt

"The KELT Transit Survey: Hot Planets around Hot, Bright Stars" 

 

ABSTRACT: The KELT Transit Survey consists of a pair of small-aperture, wide-angle automated telescope located at Winer Observatory in Sonoita, Arizona and the South African Astronomical Observatory (SAAO) in Sutherland, South Africa. Together, they are surveying roughly 60% of the sky for transiting planets. By virtue of their small apertures (42 mm) and large fields-of-view (26 degrees x 26 degrees), KELT is most sensitive to hot Jupiters transiting relatively bright (V~8-11), and thus relatively hot stars. Roughly half of the dwarf stars targeted by KELT are hotter than 6250K; such stars pose novel challenges, but also provide unique opportunities. I summarize the properties of the ~20 low-mass transiting companions discovered to date by KELT, focusing in detail on a few particularly interesting systems.

 

See also: Colloquium, 2016-17