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Precise near-infrared photometry, accounting for precipitable water vapour at SPECULOOS Southern Observatory

Authors :
Peter P Pedersen
C A Murray
D Queloz
M Gillon
B O Demory
A H M J Triaud
J de Wit
L Delrez
G Dransfield
E Ducrot
L J Garcia
Y Gómez Maqueo Chew
M N Günther
E Jehin
J McCormac
P Niraula
F J Pozuelos
B V Rackham
N Schanche
D Sebastian
S J Thompson
M Timmermans
R Wells
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The variability induced by precipitable water vapour (PWV) can heavily affect the accuracy of time-series photometric measurements gathered from the ground, especially in the near-infrared. We present here a novel method of modelling and mitigating this variability, as well as open-sourcing the developed tool -- Umbrella. In this study, we evaluate the extent to which the photometry in three common bandpasses (r', i', z'), and SPECULOOS' primary bandpass (I+z'), are photometrically affected by PWV variability. In this selection of bandpasses, the I+z' bandpass was found to be most sensitive to PWV variability, followed by z', i', and r'. The correction was evaluated on global light curves of nearby late M- and L-type stars observed by SPECULOOS' Southern Observatory (SSO) with the I+z' bandpass, using PWV measurements from the LHATPRO and local temperature/humidity sensors. A median reduction in RMS of 1.1% was observed for variability shorter than the expected transit duration for SSO's targets. On timescales longer than the expected transit duration, where long-term variability may be induced, a median reduction in RMS of 53.8% was observed for the same method of correction.<br />Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 10 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f955155469816bae4b7e66e6dbb252bf