Bibcode
                                    
                            Raetz, St.; Maciejewski, G.; Seeliger, M.; Marka, C.; Fernández, M.; Güver, T.; Göğüş, E.; Nowak, G.; Vaňko, M.; Berndt, A.; Eisenbeiss, T.; Mugrauer, M.; Trepl, L.; Gelszinnis, J.
    Bibliographical reference
                                    Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 451, Issue 4, p.4139-4149
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                        8
            
                        2015
            
  Citations
                                    18
                            Refereed citations
                                    16
                            Description
                                    Although WASP-14 b is one of the most massive and densest exoplanets on
a tight and eccentric orbit, it has never been a target of photometric
follow-up monitoring or dedicated observing campaigns. We report on new
photometric transit observations of WASP-14 b obtained within the
framework of Transit Timing Variations @ Young Exoplanet Transit
Initiative (TTV@YETI). We collected 19 light curves of 13 individual
transit events using six telescopes located in five observatories
distributed in Europe and Asia. From light-curve modelling, we
determined the planetary, stellar, and geometrical properties of the
system and found them in agreement with the values from the discovery
paper. A test of the robustness of the transit times revealed that in
case of a non-reproducible transit shape the uncertainties may be
underestimated even with a wavelet-based error estimation methods. For
the timing analysis, we included two publicly available transit times
from 2007 and 2009. The long observation period of seven years
(2007-2013) allowed us to refine the transit ephemeris. We derived an
orbital period 1.2 s longer and 10 times more precise than the one given
in the discovery paper. We found no significant periodic signal in the
timing-residuals and, hence, no evidence for TTV in the system.
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Exoplanets and Astrobiology
            
    The search for life in the universe has been driven by recent discoveries of planets around other stars (known as exoplanets), becoming one of the most active fields in modern astrophysics. The growing number of new exoplanets discovered in recent years and the recent advance on the study of their atmospheres are not only providing new valuable
            
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