Analysis of new high-precision transit light curves of WASP-10 b: starspot occultations, small planetary radius, and high metallicity
G. Maciejewski, St. Raetz, N. Nettelmann, M. Seeliger, Ch. Adam, G., Nowak, R. Neuhaeuser

TL;DR
This study refines the physical parameters of WASP-10 b using high-precision transit light curves, revealing a smaller planetary radius, starspot occultations, and potential transit timing variations suggestive of additional bodies.
Contribution
It provides new high-precision transit data, refines the planetary radius to be smaller than previous estimates, and analyzes starspot occultations and transit timing variations in the WASP-10 system.
Findings
WASP-10 b's radius is no greater than 1.03 Jupiter radii.
Detected starspot occultations during transits.
Transit timing variations suggest possible additional bodies.
Abstract
The WASP-10 planetary system is intriguing because different values of radius have been reported for its transiting exoplanet. The host star exhibits activity in terms of photometric variability, which is caused by the rotational modulation of the spots. Moreover, a periodic modulation has been discovered in transit timing of WASP-10 b, which could be a sign of an additional body perturbing the orbital motion of the transiting planet. We attempt to refine the physical parameters of the system, in particular the planetary radius, which is crucial for studying the internal structure of the transiting planet. We also determine new mid-transit times to confirm or refute observed anomalies in transit timing. We acquired high-precision light curves for four transits of WASP-10 b in 2010. Assuming various limb-darkening laws, we generated best-fit models and redetermined parameters of the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
