Investigating the physical properties of transiting hot Jupiters with the 1.5-m Kuiper Telescope
Jake D. Turner, Robin M. Leiter, Lauren I. Biddle, Kyle A. Pearson,, Kevin K. Hardegree-Ullman, Robert M. Thompson, Johanna K. Teske, Ian T., Cates, Kendall L. Cook, Michael P. Berube, Megan N. Nieberding, Christen K., Jones, Brandon Raphael, Spencer Wallace, Zachary T. Watson

TL;DR
This study presents new photometric observations of 11 hot Jupiter exoplanets, analyzing their transits to refine planetary parameters, investigate atmospheric properties, and search for transit timing variations and wavelength-dependent effects.
Contribution
It provides the first follow-up data for three planets, reports near-UV transits for two, and identifies potential atmospheric features through transit depth variations.
Findings
Possible atmospheric scattering in WASP-103b and XO-3b.
Indications of TiO/VO absorption in HAT-P-37b.
Five planets show flat spectra suggesting clouds.
Abstract
We present new photometric data of 11 hot Jupiter transiting exoplanets (CoRoT-12b, HAT-P-5b, HAT-P-12b, HAT-P-33b, HAT-P-37b, WASP-2b, WASP-24b, WASP-60b, WASP-80b, WASP-103b, XO-3b) in order to update their planetary parameters and to constrain information about their atmospheres. These observations of CoRoT-12b, HAT-P-37b and WASP-60b are the first follow-up data since their discovery. Additionally, the first near-UV transits of WASP-80b and WASP-103b are presented. We compare the results of our analysis with previous work to search for transit timing variations (TTVs) and a wavelength dependence in the transit depth. TTVs may be evidence of a third body in the system and variations in planetary radius with wavelength can help constrain the properties of the exoplanet's atmosphere. For WASP-103b and XO-3b, we find a possible variation in the transit depths that may be evidence of…
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