Infrared Eclipses of the Strongly Irradiated Planet WASP-33b, and Oscillations of its Host Star
Drake Deming, Jonathan D. Fraine, Pedro V. Sada, Nikku Madhusudhan,, Heather A. Knutson, Joseph Harrington, Jasmina Blecic, Sarah Nymeyer, Alexis, M. S. Smith, and Brian Jackson

TL;DR
This study reports infrared eclipse observations of WASP-33b and stellar oscillations, exploring atmospheric models and orbital characteristics, revealing potential non-inverted or inverted temperature structures and poor energy redistribution.
Contribution
First infrared eclipse measurements of WASP-33b combined with stellar oscillation analysis, constraining atmospheric models and orbital eccentricity.
Findings
Detected stellar oscillations in infrared bands and J-band.
Identified two possible atmospheric states: non-inverted with high C/O or inverted with solar composition.
Found orbit consistent with being circular, e*cos(omega) near zero.
Abstract
We observe two secondary eclipses of the strongly irradiated transiting planet WASP-33b in the Ks band, and one secondary eclipse each at 3.6- and 4.5 microns using Warm Spitzer. This planet orbits an A5V delta-Scuti star that is known to exhibit low amplitude non-radial p-mode oscillations at about 0.1-percent semi-amplitude. We detect stellar oscillations in all of our infrared eclipse data, and also in one night of observations at J-band out of eclipse. The oscillation amplitude, in all infrared bands except Ks, is about the same as in the optical. However, the stellar oscillations in Ks band have about twice the amplitude as seen in the optical, possibly because the Brackett-gamma line falls in this bandpass. We use our best-fit values for the eclipse depth, as well as the 0.9 micron eclipse observed by Smith et al., to explore possible states of the exoplanetary atmosphere, based…
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