Process / pipelineSignal processing

Transit Photometry

Transit photometry is an observational technique that detects exoplanets by monitoring the periodic dips in stellar brightness as planets cross in front of their host stars. First systematized by William Borucki in 1984, this method became the most successful exoplanet detection technique, with the Kepler space telescope discovering thousands of confirmed exoplanets using this approach.

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Sources

  1. Borucki, W. J., & Summers, A. L. (1984). The photometric method of detecting other planetary systems. Astrophysical Journal, 281, 537-553. DOI: 10.1086/162123
  2. Fressin, F., et al. (2013). The false positive rate for Kepler and the validation of Kepler objects of interest. Astrophysical Journal, 766(2), 81. DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/766/2/81
  3. Charbonneau, D., Brown, T. M., Latham, D. W., & Mayor, M. (2000). Detection of planetary transits across a sun-like star. Astrophysical Journal, 529(1), L45-L48. DOI: 10.1086/312457

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Referenced by

ScholarGateTransit Photometry (Transit Photometry Method for Exoplanet Detection). Retrieved 2026-06-04 from https://scholargate.app/en/astronomy/transit-photometry