ExELS: an exoplanet legacy science proposal for the ESA Euclid mission. II. Hot exoplanets and sub-stellar systems
I. McDonald, E. Kerins, M. Penny, J.-P. Beaulieu, V. Batista, S., Calchi Novati, A. Cassan, P. Fouque, S. Mao, J.B. Marquette, N. Rattenbury,, A.C. Robin, P. Tisserand, M.R. Zapatero Osorio

TL;DR
The ExELS project aims to detect and characterize a large sample of hot and cold exoplanets using microlensing and transit methods with the Euclid mission, providing new insights into their frequencies, properties, and dependence on metallicity.
Contribution
This paper presents the first detailed proposal for detecting hot exoplanets and sub-stellar systems with Euclid, combining microlensing and transit surveys for the first time.
Findings
Estimated detection of ~4100 sub-stellar objects, mostly hot Jupiters.
Potential to detect secondary eclipses, reflection, and emission in up to ~100 systems.
Capability to characterize transits with multi-colour photometry.
Abstract
The Exoplanet Euclid Legacy Survey (ExELS) proposes to determine the frequency of cold exoplanets down to Earth mass from host separations of ~1 AU out to the free-floating regime by detecting microlensing events in Galactic Bulge. We show that ExELS can also detect large numbers of hot, transiting exoplanets in the same population. The combined microlensing+transit survey would allow the first self-consistent estimate of the relative frequencies of hot and cold sub-stellar companions, reducing biases in comparing "near-field" radial velocity and transiting exoplanets with "far-field" microlensing exoplanets. The age of the Bulge and its spread in metallicity further allows ExELS to better constrain both the variation of companion frequency with metallicity and statistically explore the strength of star-planet tides. We conservatively estimate that ExELS will detect ~4100 sub-stellar…
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