KELT: The Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope, a Survey for Exoplanets Transiting Bright, Hot Stars
Joshua Pepper, Keivan Stassun, and B. Scott Gaudi

TL;DR
KELT is a survey that uses a small telescope to discover transiting exoplanets around bright, hot stars, including many rapidly rotating stars that are challenging for other methods, resulting in 22 known hot Jupiters.
Contribution
The paper introduces the KELT survey's methodology, focusing on bright, hot, and rapidly rotating stars, and reports the discovery of 22 transiting hot Jupiters, expanding the known exoplanet population.
Findings
Discovered 22 transiting hot Jupiters around bright stars.
Developed protocols for confirming planets around rapidly rotating stars.
Provided valuable data for studying planets around hot, bright stars.
Abstract
The KELT project was originally designed as a small-aperture, wide-field photometric survey that would be optimally sensitive to planets transiting bright (V~8-10) stars. This magnitude range corresponded to the gap between the faint magnitude limit where radial velocity surveys were complete, and the bright magnitude limit for transiting planet hosts routinely found by dedicated ground-based transit surveys. Malmquist bias and other factors have also led the KELT survey to focus on discovering planets transiting relatively hot host stars as well. To date, the survey has discovered 22 transiting hot Jupiters, including some of the brightest transiting planet host stars known to date. Over half of these planets transit rapidly-rotating stars with Teff > 6250 K, which had been largely eschewed by both radial velocity and transit surveys, due to the challenge of obtaining precision radial…
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