Five transiting hot Jupiters discovered using WASP-South, Euler and TRAPPIST: WASP-119 b, WASP-124 b, WASP-126 b, WASP-129 b and WASP-133 b
P. F. L. Maxted (Keele, UK), D. R. Anderson (Keele, UK), A. Collier, Cameron (St Andrews, UK), L. Delrez (Li\`ege, Belgium), M. Gillon (Li\`ege,, Belgium), C. Hellier (Keele, UK), E. Jehin (Li\`ege, Belgium), M. Lendl, (Graz, Austria), M. Neveu-VanMalle (Geneva)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of five new hot Jupiter exoplanets using combined photometric and spectroscopic observations, highlighting their properties and potential for further atmospheric and dynamical studies.
Contribution
First discovery of five transiting hot Jupiters using WASP-South, Euler, and TRAPPIST, with detailed characterization of their host stars and planetary parameters.
Findings
Five hot Jupiters with periods 2.17-5.75 days
WASP-126 hosts a low-mass, large-radius planet suitable for transmission spectroscopy
WASP-129's star is helium-rich, and WASP-133 has high lithium abundance
Abstract
We have used photometry from the WASP-South instrument to identify 5 stars showing planet-like transits in their light curves. The planetary nature of the companions to these stars has been confirmed using photometry from the EulerCam instrument on the Swiss Euler 1.2-m telescope and the TRAPPIST telescope, and spectroscopy obtained with the CORALIE spectrograph. The planets discovered are hot Jupiter systems with orbital periods in the range 2.17 to 5.75 days, masses from 0.3M to 1.2M and with radii from 1R to 1.5R. These planets orbit bright stars (V = 11-13) with spectral types in the range F9 to G4. WASP-126 is the brightest planetary system in this sample and hosts a low-mass planet with a large radius (0.3 M , 0.95R), making it a good target for transmission spectroscopy. The high density of WASP-129 A…
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