Gran Telescopio Canarias OSIRIS Transiting Exoplanet Atmospheric Survey: Detection of potassium in XO-2b from narrowband spectrophotometry
D. K. Sing, J.-M. Desert, J. J. Fortney, A. Lecavelier des Etangs, G., E. Ballester, J. Cepa, D. Ehrenreich, M. Lopez-Morales, F. Pont, M. Shabram,, and A. Vidal-Madjar

TL;DR
This study demonstrates ground-based narrow-band photometry with the GTC to detect atmospheric potassium in exoplanet XO-2b, marking the first such detection and confirming alkali metals' role in hot Jupiter atmospheres.
Contribution
First ground-based detection of potassium in an exoplanet's atmosphere using narrow-band photometry, validating the method's effectiveness for atmospheric characterization.
Findings
Detected potassium absorption at 7664.9 Å with 4.1-sigma significance
Measured planet-to-star radius contrasts at multiple wavelengths
Confirmed models with alkali metal dominance in optical spectra
Abstract
We present Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC) optical transit narrow-band photometry of the hot-Jupiter exoplanet XO-2b using the OSIRIS instrument. This unique instrument has the capabilities to deliver high cadence narrow-band photometric lightcurves, allowing us to probe the atmospheric composition of hot Jupiters from the ground. The observations were taken during three transit events which cover four wavelengths at spectral resolutions near 500, necessary for observing atmospheric features, and have near-photon limited sub-mmag precisions. Precision narrow-band photometry on a large aperture telescope allows for atmospheric transmission spectral features to be observed for exoplanets around much fainter stars than those of the well studied targets HD209458b and HD189733b, providing access to the majority of known transiting planets. For XO-2b, we measure planet-to-star radius contrasts…
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