S
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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Journal ArticleDOI
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
Benjamin J. S. Pope,Guy R. Davies,Keith Hawkins,Timothy R. White,Amalie Stokholm,Allyson Bieryla,David W. Latham,Madeline Lucey,Conny Aerts,Suzanne Aigrain,Victoria Antoci,Timothy R. Bedding,Dominic M. Bowman,Douglas A. Caldwell,Ashley Chontos,Gilbert A. Esquerdo,Daniel Huber,Paula Jofre,Simon J. Murphy,Timothy Van Reeth,Victor Silva Aguirre,Jie Yu +21 more
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
Leigh N. Fletcher,Patrick G. J. Irwin,Joanna K. Barstow,Remco de Kok,Jae-Min Lee,Suzanne Aigrain +5 more
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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The secondary eclipses of WASP-19b as seen by the ASTEP 400 telescope from Antarctica
Lyu Abe,Ivan Gonçalves,A. Agabi,A. Alapini,Tristan Guillot,Tristan Guillot,Djamel Mékarnia,Jean-Pierre Rivet,François-Xavier Schmider,Nicolas Crouzet,Jonathan J. Fortney,Frederic Pont,M. Barbieri,Jean-Baptiste Daban,Yan Fanteï-Caujolle,Carole Gouvret,Y. Bresson,A. Roussel,S. Bonhomme,A. Robini,M. Dugué,E. Bondoux,S. Peron,P.-Y. Petit,Judit Szulágyi,Thomas Fruth,Anders Erikson,Heike Rauer,Francois Fressin,F. Valbousquet,Pierre-Eric Blanc,A. Le Van Suu,Suzanne Aigrain +32 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the 40 cm ASTEP 400 telescope (austral winter 2010) to detect the transiting planet WASP-19b in order to detect secondary transits in the visible.
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Photospheric activity, rotation, and radial velocity variations of the planet-hosting star CoRoT-7
Antonino F. Lanza,Aldo S. Bonomo,C. Moutou,Isabella Pagano,S. Messina,Giuseppe Leto,Giuseppe Cutispoto,Suzanne Aigrain,Roi Alonso,Pierre Barge,Magali Deleuil,Michel Auvergne,Annie Baglin,A. Collier Cameron +13 more
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.