Following the TraCS of exoplanets with Pan-Planets: Wendelstein-1b and Wendelstein-2b
Christian Obermeier, Jana Steuer, Hanna Kellermann, Roberto P. Saglia,, Thomas Henning, Arno Riffeser, Ulrich Hopp, Gu{\dh}mundur Stefansson, Caleb, Ca\~nas, Joe P. Ninan, Suvrath Mahadevan, Howard Isaacson, Andrew W. Howard,, John H. Livingston, Johannes Koppenhoefer

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and validation of two hot Jupiters, Wendelstein-1b and Wendelstein-2b, orbiting late K stars, using multiband photometry and radial velocity measurements, highlighting an efficient validation method for faint exoplanets.
Contribution
It introduces a combined validation approach using Transit Color Signature (TraCS) and radial velocity measurements for confirming exoplanets, especially for faint targets.
Findings
Discovered two hot Jupiters orbiting late K stars.
Validated planets using multiband photometry and RV measurements.
Demonstrated multiband photometry as an effective validation tool.
Abstract
Hot Jupiters seem to get rarer with decreasing stellar mass. The goal of the Pan-Planets transit survey was the detection of such planets and a statistical characterization of their frequency. Here, we announce the discovery and validation of two planets found in that survey, Wendelstein-1b and Wendelstein-2b, which are two short-period hot Jupiters that orbit late K host stars. We validated them both by the traditional method of radial velocity measurements with the HIgh Resolution Echelle Spectrometer (HIRES) and the Habitable-zone Planet Finder (HPF) instruments and then by their Transit Color Signature (TraCS). We observed the targets in the wavelength range of Angstr\"om and performed a simultaneous multiband transit fit and additionally determined their thermal emission via secondary eclipse observations. Wendelstein-1b is a hot Jupiter with a radius of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
