Ground-based near-UV observations of 15 transiting exoplanets: Constraints on their atmospheres and no evidence for asymmetrical transits
Jake D. Turner, Kyle A. Pearson, Lauren I. Biddle, Brianna M. Smart,, Robert T. Zellem, Johanna K. Teske, Kevin K. Hardegree-Ullman, Caitlin C., Griffith, Robin M. Leiter, Ian T. Cates, Megan N. Nieberding, Carter-Thaxton, W. Smith, Robert M. Thompson, Ryan Hofmann

TL;DR
This study presents ground-based near-UV observations of 15 transiting exoplanets, finding no asymmetries and revealing potential atmospheric scattering effects through wavelength-dependent transit depths.
Contribution
First ground-based near-UV light curves for 12 exoplanets, with analysis of transit depth variations and constraints on atmospheric properties.
Findings
No non-spherical asymmetries detected in near-UV transits.
10 targets show constant transit depth across wavelengths, indicating clouds.
5 targets exhibit wavelength-dependent transit depths, suggesting scattering effects.
Abstract
Transits of exoplanets observed in the near-UV have been used to study the scattering properties of their atmospheres and possible star-planet interactions. We observed the primary transits of 15 exoplanets (CoRoT-1b, GJ436b, HAT-P-1b, HAT-P-13b, HAT-P-16b, HAT-P-22b, TrES-2b, TrES-4b, WASP-1b, WASP-12b, WASP-33b, WASP-36b, WASP-44b, WASP-48b, and WASP-77Ab) in the near-UV and several optical photometric bands to update their planetary parameters, ephemerides, search for a wavelength dependence in their transit depths to constrain their atmospheres, and determine if asymmetries are visible in their light curves. Here we present the first ground-based near-UV light curves for 12 of the targets (CoRoT-1b, GJ436b, HAT-P-1b, HAT-P-13b, HAT-P-22b, TrES-2b, TrES-4b, WASP-1b, WASP-33b, WASP-36b, WASP-48b, and WASP-77Ab). We find that none of the near-UV transits exhibit any non-spherical…
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