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    High-precision photometry by telescope defocusing - III. The transiting planetary system WASP-2

    , Article Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society ; Volume 408, Issue 3 , 2010 , Pages 1680-1688 ; 00358711 (ISSN) Southworth, J ; Mancini, L ; Novati, S. C ; Dominik, M ; Glitrup, M ; Hinse, T. C ; Jørgensen, U. G ; Mathiasen, M ; Ricci, D ; Maier, G ; Zimmer, F ; Bozza, V ; Browne, P ; Bruni, I ; Burgdorf, M ; Dall'Ora, M ; Finet, F ; Harpsøe, K ; Hundertmark, M ; Liebig, C ; Rahvar, S ; Scarpetta, G ; Skottfelt, J ; Smalley, B ; Snodgrass, C ; Surdej, J ; Sharif University of Technology
    2010
    Abstract
    We present high-precision photometry of three transits of the extrasolar planetary system WASP-2, obtained by defocusing the telescopes, and achieving scatters of between 0.42 and 0.73 mmag versus the best-fitting model. These data are modelled using the jktebop code, and taking into account the light from the recently discovered faint star close to the system. The physical properties of the WASP-2 system are derived using tabulated predictions from five different sets of stellar evolutionary models, allowing both statistical and systematic error bars to be specified. We find the mass and radius of the planet to be Mb= 0.846 ± 0.055 ± 0.023 MJup and Rb= 1.043 ± 0.029 ± 0.015RJup. It has a... 

    High-precision photometry by telescope defocussing - II. the transiting planetary system WASP-4

    , Article Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society ; Volume 399, Issue 1 , 2009 , Pages 287-294 ; 00358711 (ISSN) Southworth, J ; Hinse, T. C ; Burgdorf, M. J ; Dominik, M ; Hornstrup, A ; Jørgensen, U. G ; Liebig, C ; Ricci, D ; Thone, C. C ; Anguita, T ; Bozza, V ; Novati, S. C ; Harpsoe, K ; Mancini, L ; Masi, G ; Mathiasen, M ; Rahvar, S ; Scarpetta, G ; Snodgrass, C ; Surdej, J ; Zub, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    2009
    Abstract
    We present and analyse light curves of four transits of the Southern hemisphere extrasolar planetary system WASP-4, obtained with a telescope defocused so the radius of each point spread function was 17 arcsec (44 pixels). This approach minimizes both random and systematic errors, allowing us to achieve scatters of between 0.60 and 0.88 mmag per observation over complete transit events. The light curves are augmented by published observations and analysed using the jktebop code. The results of this process are combined with theoretical stellar model predictions to derive the physical properties of the WASP-4 system. We find that the mass and radius of the planet are M b = 1.289 +0.090 -0.090... 

    High-precision photometry by telescope defocusing - I. the transiting planetary system WASP-5

    , Article Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society ; Volume 396, Issue 2 , 2009 , Pages 1023-1031 ; 00358711 (ISSN) Southworth, J ; Hinse, T. C ; Jørgensen, U. G ; Dominik, M ; Ricci, D ; Burgdorf, M. J ; Hornstrup, A ; Wheatley, P. J ; Anguita, T ; Bozza, V ; Novati, S. C ; Harpsøe, K ; Kjærgaard, P ; Liebig, C ; Mancini, L ; Masi, G ; Mathiasen, M ; Rahvar, S ; Scarpetta, G ; Snodgrass, C ; Surdej, J ; Thöne, C. C ; Zub, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    2009
    Abstract
    We present high-precision photometry of two transit events of the extrasolar planetary system WASP-5, obtained with the Danish 1.54-m telescope at European Southern Obseratory La Silla. In order to minimize both random and flat-fielding errors, we defocused the telescope so its point spread function approximated an annulus of diameter 40 pixel (16 arcsec). Data reduction was undertaken using standard aperture photometry plus an algorithm for optimally combining the ensemble of comparison stars. The resulting light curves have point-to-point scatters of 0.50 mmag for the first transit and 0.59 mmag for the second. We construct detailed signal-to-noise ratio calculations for defocused... 

    OGLE-2014-BLG-1186: Gravitational microlensing providing evidence for a planet orbiting the foreground star or for a close binary source?

    , Article Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society ; Volume 484, Issue 4 , 2019 , Pages 5608-5632 ; 00358711 (ISSN) Dominik, M ; Bachelet, E ; Bozza, V ; Street, R. A ; Han, C ; Hundertmark, M ; Udalski, A ; Bramich, D. M ; Alsubai, K. A ; Calchi Novati, S ; Ciceri, S ; D'Ago, G ; Figuera Jaimes, R ; Haugbølle, T ; Hinse, T. C ; Horne, K ; Jørgensen, U. G ; Juncher, D ; Kains, N ; Korhonen, H ; Mancini, L ; Menzies, J ; Popovas, A ; Rabus, M ; Rahvar, S ; Scarpetta, G ; Schmidt, R ; Skottfelt, J ; Snodgrass, C ; Southworth, J ; Starkey, D ; Steele, I. A ; Surdej, J ; Tsapras, Y ; Wambsganss, J ; Wertz, O ; Pietrukowicz, P ; Szymanski, M. K ; Mróz, P ; Skowron, J ; Soszynski, I ; Ulaczyk, K ; Poleski, R ; Wyrzykowski, Ł ; Kozłowski, S ; Sharif University of Technology
    Oxford University Press  2019
    Abstract
    Discussing the particularly long gravitational microlensing event OGLE-2014-BLG-1186 with a time-scale tE ∼ 300 d, we present a methodology for identifying the nature of localised deviations from single-lens point-source light curves, which ensures that (1) the claimed signal is substantially above the noise floor, (2) the inferred properties are robustly determined and their estimation is not subject to confusion with systematic noise in the photometry, (3) alternative viable solutions within the model framework are not missed. Annual parallax and binarity could be separated and robustly measured from the wing and the peak data, respectively. We find matching model light curves that involve...