XO-3 b exhibits a 30-70% deeper NUV transit depth of 0.1371 and a 22-minute late center relative to the optical ephemeris, with an extremely low estimated mass-loss rate and a bow-shock model that predicts the opposite timing direction.
Title resolution pending
4 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
fields
astro-ph.EP 4years
2026 4representative citing papers
TOI-1710 b has a true obliquity of 149 degrees indicating retrograde motion, favoring high-eccentricity migration via planet-planet scattering and Kozai-Lidov cycles for this tidally detached super-Neptune.
TOI-159 b is confirmed as the hottest known eccentric hot Jupiter (e = 0.24) with a 13-sigma Keplerian detection around a young gamma Doradus star, including a preliminary low-resolution transmission spectrum.
New transit data for WASP-11 b over 16 years shows no orbital decay or TTV signals from other planets, with a transmission spectrum exhibiting a strong Rayleigh scattering slope possibly from the atmosphere or contamination.
citing papers explorer
-
The NUV transit of XO-3 b
XO-3 b exhibits a 30-70% deeper NUV transit depth of 0.1371 and a 22-minute late center relative to the optical ephemeris, with an extremely low estimated mass-loss rate and a bow-shock model that predicts the opposite timing direction.
-
A tidally detached super Neptune on a strongly misaligned retrograde orbit
TOI-1710 b has a true obliquity of 149 degrees indicating retrograde motion, favoring high-eccentricity migration via planet-planet scattering and Kozai-Lidov cycles for this tidally detached super-Neptune.
-
TOI-159 b: an eccentric hot-Jupiter planet around a young, pulsating $\gamma$ Doradus star
TOI-159 b is confirmed as the hottest known eccentric hot Jupiter (e = 0.24) with a 13-sigma Keplerian detection around a young gamma Doradus star, including a preliminary low-resolution transmission spectrum.
-
Investigation of Transit Timing and an Optical Transmission Spectrum of the Hot Jupiter WASP-11 b
New transit data for WASP-11 b over 16 years shows no orbital decay or TTV signals from other planets, with a transmission spectrum exhibiting a strong Rayleigh scattering slope possibly from the atmosphere or contamination.