paired: A Statistical Framework for Detecting Stellar Binarity with Gaia RVs. I. Sensitivity to Unresolved Binaries
Data Release 3 (DR3) from the Gaia Mission includes radial velocity measurements of over 33 million targets. Among many scientific applications, the overlap of this stellar sample with targeted exoplanet transit survey stars presents an opportunity to understand planet occurrence in the context of s...
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Zusammenfassung: | Data Release 3 (DR3) from the Gaia Mission includes radial velocity
measurements of over 33 million targets. Among many scientific applications,
the overlap of this stellar sample with targeted exoplanet transit survey stars
presents an opportunity to understand planet occurrence in the context of
stellar multiplicity on a large scale. Yet, any interpretation of occurrence
relies upon an understanding of survey sensitivity. While the sensitivity to
planets in transit surveys is well understood, a characterization of the
sensitivity of Gaia to unresolved binaries is also critical. We describe here a
statistical framework called paired, which we developed to enable the forward
modeling of Gaia radial velocity observables for large samples of stars. The
paired machinery links the reported radial velocity noise for a given star from
Gaia to the probability of a spatially unresolved stellar companion. We
demonstrate how this enables the user, given an observed distribution of
individual binary ``probabilities" for a set of stars, to understand this
distribution within the sensitivity limits of Gaia. For the subset of stars
with the highest probability of excess radial velocity noise, we describe the
ability of paired to constrain the semi-amplitude of the stellar binary. Where
possible, we benchmark our inferred radial velocity semi-amplitudes against
those from ground-based radial velocity surveys, and the subset published by
Gaia DR3 itself. We aim for paired to be a community tool for the exploration
of the effects of binarity on planets at a population level, but also for any
user interested in stellar populations. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2206.11275 |