Probing potassium in the atmosphere of HD 80606b with tunable filter transit spectrophotometry from the Gran Telescopio Canarias
Knicole D. Colon (University of Florida), Eric B. Ford (University of, Florida), Seth Redfield (Wesleyan University), Jonathan J. Fortney, (University of California, Santa Cruz), Megan Shabram (University of, Florida), Hans J. Deeg (IAC, Universidad de La Laguna)

TL;DR
This study used tunable filter spectrophotometry from the Gran Telescopio Canarias to investigate potassium absorption in the atmosphere of exoplanet HD 80606b during transit, revealing significant wavelength-dependent atmospheric features.
Contribution
First high-precision narrow-band photometry of HD 80606b during transit probing potassium features with tunable filters, suggesting atmospheric dynamics and composition insights.
Findings
Detected a significant colour change indicating atmospheric absorption.
Observed a large apparent radius variation with wavelength, exceeding atmospheric scale height.
Proposed high-speed wind-driven potassium in the exosphere as a possible explanation.
Abstract
We report observations of HD 80606 using the 10.4-m Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC) and the OSIRIS tunable filter imager. We acquired very-high-precision, narrow-band photometry in four bandpasses around the K I absorption feature during the January 2010 transit of HD 80606b and during out-of-transit observations conducted in January and April of 2010. We obtained differential photometric precisions of \sim 2.08e-4 for the in-transit flux ratio measured at 769.91-nm, which probes the K I line core. We find no significant difference in the in-transit flux ratio between observations at 768.76 and 769.91 nm. Yet, we find a difference of \sim 8.09 \pm 2.88e-4 between these observations and observations at a longer wavelength that probes the K I wing (777.36 nm). While the presence of red noise in the transit data has a non-negligible effect on the uncertainties in the flux ratio, the…
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