The climate of HD 189733b from fourteen transits and eclipses measured by Spitzer
E. Agol, N. B. Cowan (University of Washington, Kavli Institute for, Theoretical Physics, UCSB), H. A. Knutson (UC Berkeley, Kavli Institute for, Theoretical Physics, UCSB), D. Deming (NASA Goddard Space Flight Center), J., H. Steffen (Fermilab)

TL;DR
This study provides detailed infrared observations of HD 189733b, revealing its atmospheric variability, precise transit timings, phase variations, and confirming the hot spot offset, advancing understanding of exoplanet atmospheres and system dynamics.
Contribution
Introduces a new correction method for detector ramp variation and delivers the most precise transit timings and phase measurements for HD 189733b.
Findings
Upper limit of 2.7% on day-side flux variability
Most precise transit times with 3-second accuracy
No significant transit-timing variations detected
Abstract
We present observations of seven transits and seven eclipses of the transiting planet system HD 189733 taken with Spitzer IRAC at 8 microns. We use a new correction for the detector ramp variation with a double-exponential function. Our main findings are: (1) an upper limit on the variability of the day-side planet flux of 2.7% (68% confidence); (2) the most precise set of transit times measured for a transiting planet, with an average accuracy of 3 seconds; (3) a lack of transit-timing variations, excluding the presence of second planets in this system above 20% of the mass of Mars in low-order mean-motion resonance at 95% confidence; (4) a confirmation of the planet's phase variation, finding the night side is 64% as bright as the day side, as well as an upper limit on the night-side variability of 17% (68% confidence); (5) a better correction for stellar variability at 8 micron…
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