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Near-UV and optical observations of the transiting exoplanet TrES-3b

Authors :
Turner, Jake D.
Smart, Brianna M.
Hardegree-Ullman, Kevin K.
Carleton, Timothy M.
Walker-LaFollette, Amanda M.
Crawford, Benjamin E.
Smith, Carter-Thaxton W.
McGraw, Allison M.
Small, Lindsay C.
Rocchetto, Marco
Cunningham, Kathryn I.
Towner, Allison P. M.
Zellem, Robert
Robertson, Amy N.
Guvenen, Blythe C.
Schwarz, Kamber R.
Hardegree-Ullman, Emily E.
Collura, Daniel
Henz, Triana N.
Lejoly, Cassandra
Richardson, Logan L.
Weinand, Michael A.
Taylor, Joanna M.
Daugherty, Michael J.
Wilson, Ashley A.
Austin, Carmen L.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

We observed nine primary transits of the hot Jupiter TrES-3b in several optical and near-UV photometric bands from 2009 June to 2012 April in an attempt to detect its magnetic field. Vidotto, Jardine and Helling suggest that the magnetic field of TrES-3b can be constrained if its near-UV light curve shows an early ingress compared to its optical light curve, while its egress remains unaffected. Predicted magnetic field strengths of Jupiter-like planets should range between 8 G and 30 G. Using these magnetic field values and an assumed B_star of 100 G, the Vidotto et al. method predicts a timing difference of 5-11 min. We did not detect an early ingress in our three nights of near-UV observations, despite an average cadence of 68 s and an average photometric precision of 3.7 mmag. However, we determined an upper limit of TrES-3b's magnetic field strength to range between 0.013 and 1.3 G (for a 1-100 G magnetic field strength range for the host star, TrES-3) using a timing difference of 138 s derived from the Nyquist-Shannon sampling theorem. To verify our results of an abnormally small magnetic field strength for TrES-3b and to further constrain the techniques of Vidotto et al., we propose future observations of TrES-3b with other platforms capable of achieving a shorter near-UV cadence. We also present a refinement of the physical parameters of TrES-3b, an updated ephemeris and its first published near-UV light curve. We find that the near-UV planetary radius of Rp = 1.386+0.248-0.144 RJup is consistent with the planet's optical radius.<br />Comment: Accepted for Publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (2012 September 21). 13 pages, 5 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1211.4895
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/sts061