Detection of the secondary eclipse of WASP-10b in the Ks-band
Patricia Cruz, David Barrado, Jorge Lillo-Box, Marcos Diaz, Jayne, Birkby, Mercedes L\'opez-Morales, Simon Hodgkin, Jonathan J. Fortney

TL;DR
This study reports the ground-based detection of the secondary eclipse of exoplanet WASP-10b in the Ks-band, providing insights into its orbital eccentricity and thermal emission.
Contribution
First ground-based detection of WASP-10b's secondary eclipse in Ks-band, constraining its orbital eccentricity and phase offset with detailed analysis.
Findings
Eclipse depth of 0.137% with uncertainties
Phase offset indicating near-circular orbit
Eccentricity too small to be significant
Abstract
WASP-10b, a non-inflated hot Jupiter, was discovered around a K-dwarf in a near circular orbit (). Since its discovery in 2009, different published parameters for this system have led to a discussion about the size, density, and eccentricity of this exoplanet. In order to test the hypothesis of a circular orbit for WASP-10b, we have observed its secondary eclipse in the Ks-band, where the contribution of planetary light is high enough to be detected from the ground. Observations were performed with the OMEGA2000 instrument at the 3.5-meter telescope at Calar Alto (Almer\'ia, Spain), in staring mode during 5.4 continuous hours, with the telescope defocused, monitoring the target during the expected secondary eclipse. A relative light curve was generated and corrected from systematic effects, using the Principal Component Analysis (PCA) technique. The final light curve was…
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