The secondary eclipses of WASP-19b as seen by the ASTEP 400 telescope from Antarctica
L. Abe, I. Gon\c{c}alves, A. Agabi, A. Alapini, T. Guillot, D., M\'ekarnia, J.-P. Rivet, F.-X. Schmider, N. Crouzet, J. Fortney, F. Pont, M., Barbieri, J.-B. Daban, Y. Fante\"i-Caujolle, C. Gouvret, Y. Bresson, A., Roussel, S. Bonhomme, A. Robini, M. Dugu\'e, E. Bondoux

TL;DR
This study used the ASTEP 400 telescope in Antarctica to observe the exoplanet WASP-19b, detecting its secondary eclipse and analyzing its thermal emission and reflection properties with high precision photometry.
Contribution
First detection of the secondary eclipse of WASP-19b from Antarctica using the ASTEP 400 telescope, providing insights into its atmospheric temperature and reflective properties.
Findings
Detected secondary eclipse with 2.0 sigma significance
Estimated day side brightness temperature of ~2690 K
Suggested low heat redistribution or high reflectivity of the planet
Abstract
The ASTEP (Antarctica Search for Transiting ExoPlanets) program was originally aimed at probing the quality of the Dome C, Antarctica for the discovery and characterization of exoplanets by photometry. In the first year of operation of the 40 cm ASTEP 400 telescope (austral winter 2010), we targeted the known transiting planet WASP-19b in order to try to detect its secondary transits in the visible. This is made possible by the excellent sub-millimagnitude precision of the binned data. The WASP-19 system was observed during 24 nights in May 2010. The photometric variability level due to starspots is about 1.8% (peak-to-peak), in line with the SuperWASP data from 2007 (1.4%) and larger than in 2008 (0.07%). We find a rotation period of WASP-19 of 10.7 +/- 0.5 days, in agreement with the SuperWASP determination of 10.5 +/- 0.2 days. Theoretical models show that this can only be explained…
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.
