论文标题
星际学的苔丝数据:定时验证
TESS Data for Asteroseismology: Timing verification
论文作者
论文摘要
过境系外行星调查卫星(TESS)是NASA最新的太空望远镜,致力于发现附近恒星周围的过渡系外行星。除了任务的主要目标外,Asterosemology是一个重要的次要目标,并且与Tess在两年全天候调查中将制定的高质量时间系列非常相关。使用Tess进行星星志学引入了强大的时机要求,尤其是对于相干振荡器。尽管板上的内部时钟在自己的时间内是精确的,但它可能会持续漂移,因此需要校准,或者可能会无意中引入偏移。在这里,我们同时介绍了南部黄半球几个二元系统的原发性腹膜的基于空间和空间的观察结果,用于验证苔丝时间戳的可靠性。从十二个同时的苔丝/地面观测中,我们确定了等于5.8 +/- 2.5秒的时间偏移,从某种意义上说,用苔丝测得的barycentric时间是实时的。偏移量与2.3-sigma水平的零一致。此外,我们使用了405个单独测量的年中中期时间,这些中途时间仅通过苔丝观察到的26个黯然失色的二进制恒星,以测试潜在漂移的存在,并具有单调生长(或衰减)影响全恒星的观察结果。我们发现一个对应于Sigma_drift = 0.009 +/- 0.015秒/天的漂移。我们发现,测得的偏移量的大小将不会成为比较地面和空间数据的问题,以便在用苔丝观察到的大多数目标中相干振荡。
The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) is NASA's latest space telescope dedicated to the discovery of transiting exoplanets around nearby stars. Besides the main goal of the mission, asteroseismology is an important secondary goal and very relevant for the high-quality time series that TESS will make during its two year all-sky survey. Using TESS for asteroseismology introduces strong timing requirements, especially for coherent oscillators. Although the internal clock on board TESS is precise in its own time, it might have a constant drift and will thus need calibration, or offsets might inadvertently be introduced. Here we present simultaneously ground- and space-based observations of primary eclipses of several binary systems in the Southern ecliptic hemisphere, used to verify the reliability of the TESS timestamps. From twelve contemporaneous TESS/ground observations we determined a time offset equal to 5.8 +/- 2.5 sec, in the sense that the Barycentric time measured by TESS is ahead of real time. The offset is consistent with zero at 2.3-sigma level. In addition, we used 405 individually measured mid-eclipse times of 26 eclipsing binary stars observed solely by TESS to test the existence of a potential drift with a monotonic growth (or decay) affecting the observations of all stars. We find a drift corresponding to sigma_drift = 0.009 +/- 0.015 sec/day. We find that the measured offset is of a size that will not become an issue for comparing ground-based and space data for coherent oscillations for most of the targets observed with TESS.