Towards consistent mapping of distant worlds: secondary-eclipse scanning of the exoplanet HD189733b
Julien de Wit (1,2), Micha\"el Gillon (3), Brice-Olivier Demory (1), and Sara Seager (1,4) ((1) Department of Earth, Atmospheric, Planetary, Sciences, MIT, USA,(2) Facult\'e des Sciences Appliqu\'ees, Universit\'e de, Li\`ege, Belgium

TL;DR
This study demonstrates how eclipse scanning of the exoplanet HD189733b using Spitzer data reveals non-uniform thermal patterns, improves system parameter constraints, and offers a framework for future atmospheric mapping of exoplanets.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel eclipse-scanning method combined with MCMC analysis to map exoplanet atmospheres and refine system parameters, including orbital eccentricity and brightness distribution.
Findings
Detected a 6-σ deviation indicating non-uniform thermal emission.
Refined the upper limit of orbital eccentricity to e<0.011 (95%).
Provided a framework for future multi-wavelength exoplanet atmospheric mapping.
Abstract
Mapping distant worlds is the next frontier for exoplanet infrared photometry studies. Ultimately, constraining spatial and temporal properties of an exoplanet atmosphere will provide further insight into its physics. For tidally-locked hot Jupiters that transit and are eclipsed by their host star, the first steps are now possible. Our aim is to constrain an exoplanet's shape, brightness distribution (BD) and system parameters from its light curve. Notably, we rely on the eclipse scanning. We use archived Spitzer 8-{\mu}m data of HD189733 (6 transits, 8 secondary eclipses, and a phase curve) in a global MCMC procedure for mitigating systematics. We also include HD189733's out-of-transit radial velocity measurements. We find a 6-{\sigma} deviation from the expected occultation of a uniformly-bright disk. This deviation emerges mainly from HD189733b's thermal pattern, not from its…
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