The hot dayside and asymmetric transit of WASP-189b seen by CHEOPS
M. Lendl, Sz. Csizmadia, A. Deline, L. Fossati, D. Kitzmann, K. Heng,, S. Hoyer, S. Salmon, W. Benz, C. Broeg, D. Ehrenreich, A. Fortier, D. Queloz,, A. Bonfanti, A. Brandeker, A. Collier Cameron, L. Delrez, A. Garcia Mu\~noz,, M.J. Hooton, P.F.L. Maxted, B.M. Morris

TL;DR
This paper reports CHEOPS observations of the hot Jupiter WASP-189b, detecting occultations and asymmetric transits caused by gravity darkening, refining planetary parameters, and demonstrating CHEOPS's high photometric precision.
Contribution
First CHEOPS measurement of WASP-189b's occultation and transits, revealing atmospheric properties and star-planet alignment with high precision.
Findings
Detected occultation depth of 87.9 ppm consistent with a hot, unreflective atmosphere.
Refined planetary radius to 1.619 R_J with 25% deeper transits.
Measured orbital obliquity of approximately 86 degrees, confirming previous spectroscopic results.
Abstract
The CHEOPS space mission dedicated to exoplanet follow-up was launched in December 2019, equipped with the capacity to perform photometric measurements at the 20 ppm level. As CHEOPS carries out its observations in a broad optical passband, it can provide insights into the reflected light from exoplanets and constrain the short-wavelength thermal emission for the hottest of planets by observing occultations and phase curves. Here, we report the first CHEOPS observation of an occultation, namely, that of the hot Jupiter WASP-189b, a planet orbiting an A-type star. We detected the occultation of WASP-189 b at high significance in individual measurements and derived an occultation depth of ppm based on four occultations. We compared these measurements to model predictions and we find that they are consistent with an unreflective atmosphere heated to a…
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