Near-infrared transit photometry of the exoplanet HD 149026b
Joshua A. Carter, Joshua N. Winn, Ronald Gilliland, Matthew J. Holman

TL;DR
This study presents near-infrared transit observations of exoplanet HD 149026b, refining stellar and planetary parameters, and suggests possible atmospheric effects influencing transit depth measurements.
Contribution
First near-infrared transit photometry of HD 149026b with refined stellar and planetary parameters, and analysis of atmospheric absorption effects.
Findings
Refined stellar density and radius estimates.
Larger planetary radius than previous measurements.
Potential wavelength-dependent atmospheric absorption effects.
Abstract
The transiting exoplanet HD 149026b is an important case for theories of planet formation and planetary structure, because the planet's relatively small size has been interpreted as evidence for a highly metal-enriched composition. We present observations of 4 transits with the Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer on the Hubble Space Telescope, within a wavelength range of 1.1--2.0 m. Analysis of the light curve gives the most precise estimate yet of the stellar mean density, g cm. By requiring agreement between the observed stellar properties (including ) and stellar evolutionary models, we refine the estimate of the stellar radius: . We also find a deeper transit than has been measured at optical and mid-infrared wavelengths. Taken together, these findings imply a…
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