Possible detection of a bimodal cloud distribution in the atmosphere of HAT-P-32\,A\,b from multi-band photometry
Jeremy Tregloan-Reed, John Southworth, L. Mancini, P. Molli\`ere, S., Ciceri, I. Bruni, D. Ricci, C. Ayala-Loera, T. Henning

TL;DR
This study presents high-precision multi-band photometry of HAT-P-32b transits, deriving system parameters and revealing a bimodal cloud distribution in its atmosphere through transmission spectroscopy.
Contribution
It provides the first high-precision multi-band photometry of HAT-P-32b transits and identifies a bimodal cloud particle distribution in its atmosphere.
Findings
High-precision ground-based u-band transit achieved
System parameters consistent with previous literature
Detection of bimodal cloud particles in the atmosphere
Abstract
We present high-precision photometry of eight separate transit events in the HAT-P-32 planetary system. One transit event was observed simultaneously by two telescopes of which one obtained a simultaneous multi-band light curve in three optical bands, giving a total of 11 transit light curves. Due to the filter selection and in conjunction with using the defocussed photometry technique we were able to obtain an extremely high precision, ground-based transit in the \textit{u}-band (350\,nm), with an rms scatter of \,mmag. All 11 transits were modelled using \textsc{prism} and \textsc{gemc}, and the physical properties of the system calculated. We find the mass and radius of the host star to be and , respectively. For the planet we find a mass of , a radius of and a density of…
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