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Suzanne Aigrain

Researcher at University of Oxford

Publications -  359
Citations -  28631

Suzanne Aigrain is an academic researcher from University of Oxford. The author has contributed to research in topics: Planet & Exoplanet. The author has an hindex of 89, co-authored 348 publications receiving 25967 citations. Previous affiliations of Suzanne Aigrain include University of Exeter & European Space Research and Technology Centre.

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Modelling solar-like variability for the detection of Earth-like planetary transits. II) Performance of the three-spot modelling, harmonic function fitting, iterative non-linear filtering and sliding boxcar filtering

TL;DR: In this article, a comparison of four methods of filtering solar-like variability to increase the efficiency of detection of Earth-like planetary transits by means of box-shaped transit finder algorithms is presented.
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The Kepler Smear Campaign: Light Curves for 102 Very Bright Stars

TL;DR: The first data release of the Kepler Smear Campaign was made by as discussed by the authors, using collateral'smear' data obtained in the Kepler four-year mission to reconstruct light curves of 102 stars too bright to have been otherwise targeted.
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Exploring the diversity of Jupiter-class planets

TL;DR: The benefits and potential flaws of retrieval techniques for establishing a family of atmospheric solutions that reproduce the available data, and the requirements for future spectroscopic characterization of a set of Jupiter-class objects to test the physical and chemical understanding of these planets are discussed.
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Photospheric activity, rotation, and radial velocity variations of the planet-hosting star CoRoT-7

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the magnetic activity of CoRoT-7 and used the results for a better understanding of its impact on stellar RV variations, and they derived the longitudinal distribution of active regions on CoRoTs-7 from a maximum entropy spot model of the light curve, assuming that each active region consists of dark spots and bright faculae in a fixed proportion.