Transit timing of TrES-2: a combined analysis of ground- and space-based photometry
St. Raetz, G. Maciejewski, Ch. Ginski, M. Mugrauer, A. Berndt, T., Eisenbeiss, Ch. Adam, M. Raetz, T. Roell, M. Seeliger, C. Marka, M. Vanko, L., Bukowiecki, R. Errmann, M. Kitze, J. Ohlert, T. Pribulla, J.G. Schmidt, D., Sebastian, D. Puchalski, N. Tetzlaff, M.M. Hohle

TL;DR
This study combines seven years of ground- and space-based photometry to precisely analyze TrES-2's transits, finding no significant timing variations but slight changes in transit depth possibly linked to stellar activity.
Contribution
It provides the most precise system parameters for TrES-2 by combining extensive ground and space data and thoroughly analyzing transit timing variations.
Findings
No significant transit timing variations detected.
Transit depth shows a slight increase, possibly due to stellar activity.
System parameters are refined and in agreement with previous studies.
Abstract
Homogeneous observations and careful analysis of transit light curves can lead to the identification of transit timing variations (TTVs). TrES-2 is one of few exoplanets, which offer the matchless possibility to combine long-term ground-based observations with continuous satellite data. Our research aimed at the search for TTVs that would be indicative of perturbations from additional bodies in the system. We also wanted to refine the system parameters and the orbital elements. We obtained 44 ground-based light curves of 31 individual transit events of TrES-2. Eight 0.2 - 2.2-m telescopes located at six observatories in Germany, Poland and Spain were used. In addition, we analysed 18 quarters (Q0-Q17) of observational data from NASA's space telescope Kepler including 435 individual transit events and 11 publicly available ground-based light curves. Assuming different limb darkening (LD)…
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