Visible-light Phase Curves from the Second Year of the TESS Primary Mission
Ian Wong, Daniel Kitzmann, Avi Shporer, Kevin Heng, Tara Fetherolf,, Bj\"orn Benneke, Tansu Daylan, Stephen R. Kane, Roland Vanderspek, Sara, Seager, Joshua N. Winn, Jon M. Jenkins, and Eric B. Ting

TL;DR
This study analyzes full-orbit phase curves of transiting exoplanets observed by TESS in Year 2, revealing atmospheric properties, brightness modulations, and refining planetary parameters with new albedo and temperature measurements.
Contribution
It provides new phase-curve measurements, atmospheric retrievals, and updated ephemerides for multiple exoplanets, expanding understanding of their atmospheres and orbital characteristics.
Findings
Seven systems show significant secondary eclipses and brightness modulations.
KELT-9b and WASP-12b have eastward hotspot offsets.
Kepler-13Ab's atmosphere has a non-inverted temperature-pressure profile.
Abstract
We carried out a systematic study of full-orbit phase curves for known transiting systems in the northern ecliptic sky that were observed during Year 2 of the TESS primary mission. We applied the same methodology for target selection, data processing, and light-curve fitting as we did in our Year 1 study. Out of the 15 transiting systems selected for analysis, seven - HAT-P-7, KELT-1, KELT-9, KELT-16, KELT-20, Kepler-13A, and WASP-12 - show statistically significant secondary eclipses and day-night atmospheric brightness modulations. Small eastward dayside hotspot offsets were measured for KELT-9b and WASP-12b. KELT-1, Kepler-13A, and WASP-12 show additional phase-curve variability attributed to the tidal distortion of the host star; the amplitudes of these signals are consistent with theoretical predictions. We combined occultation measurements from TESS and Spitzer to compute dayside…
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