A cool starspot or a second transiting planet in the TrES-1 system?
M. Rabus, R. Alonso, J. A. Belmonte, H. J. Deeg, R. L. Gilliland, J., M. Almenara Villa, T. M. Brown, D. Charbonneau, G. Mandushev

TL;DR
This study analyzes a flux increase during a TrES-1 transit observed with HST, exploring whether it is caused by a starspot or a second transiting planet, using multi-epoch observations and statistical analysis.
Contribution
It provides constraints on the size and temperature of a potential starspot or second planet based on transit data, and discusses methods to distinguish between these scenarios.
Findings
HST data shows a single clear flux rise during transit.
Ground data detected two flux increases with low significance.
The flux rise is consistent with a starspot or a second transiting planet.
Abstract
We investigate the origin of a flux increase found during a transit of TrES-1, observed with the HST. This feature in the HST light curve cannot be attributed to noise and is supposedly a dark area on the stellar surface of the host star eclipsed by TrES-1 during its transit. We investigate the likeliness of two possible hypothesis for its origin: A starspot or a second transiting planet. We made use of several transit observations of TrES-1 from space with the HST and from ground with the IAC-80 telescope. On the basis of these observations we did a statistical study of flux variations in each of the observed events, to investigate if similar flux increases are present in other parts of the data set. The HST observation presents a single clear flux rise during a transit whereas the ground observations led to the detection of two such events but with low significance. In the case of…
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