New transiting hot Jupiters discovered by WASP-South, Euler/CORALIE and TRAPPIST-South
Coel Hellier (Keele), D.R. Anderson, F. Bouchy, A. Burdanov, A., Collier Cameron, L. Delrez, M. Gillon, E. Jehin, M. Lendl, L.D. Nielsen,, P.F.L. Maxted, F. Pepe, D. Pollacco, D. Queloz, D. Segransan, B. Smalley,, A.H.M.J. Triaud, S. Udry, R.G. West

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of eight new hot-Jupiter exoplanets from the WASP-South survey, detailing their properties, orbits, and host stars, and highlighting one particularly promising candidate for atmospheric studies.
Contribution
The paper presents eight newly discovered hot-Jupiter exoplanets with detailed characterization, expanding the known population and providing potential targets for atmospheric analysis.
Findings
Eight hot-Jupiters discovered with diverse masses and radii.
Several planets exhibit bloated radii and grazing transits.
One planet identified as an excellent candidate for atmospheric characterization.
Abstract
We report the discovery of eight hot-Jupiter exoplanets from the WASP-South transit survey. WASP-144b has a mass of 0.44 Mj, a radius of 0.85 Rj, and is in a 2.27-d orbit around a V = 12.9, K2 star which shows a 21-d rotational modulation. WASP-145Ab is a 0.89 Mj planet in a 1.77-d orbit with a grazing transit, which means that the planetary radius is not well constrained. The host is a V = 11.5, K2 star with a companion 5 arcsecs away and 1.4 mags fainter. WASP-158b is a relatively massive planet at 2.8 Mj with a radius of 1.1 Rj and a 3.66-d orbit. It transits a V = 12.1, F6 star. WASP-159b is a bloated hot Jupiter (1.4 Rj and 0.55 Mj) in a 3.8-d orbit around a V = 12.9, F9 star. WASP-162b is a massive planet in a relatively long and highly eccentric orbit (5.2 Mj, P = 9.6 d, e = 0.43). It transits a V = 12.2, K0 star. WASP-168b is a bloated hot Jupiter (0.42 Mj, 1.5 Rj) in a 4.15-d…
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