The ExoClock project has been created with the aim of increasing the efficiency of the Ariel mission. It will achieve this by continuously monitoring and updating the ephemerides of Ariel candidates over an extended period, in order to produce a consistent catalogue of reliable and precise ephemerides. This work presents a homogenous catalogue of updated ephemerides for 450 planets, generated by the integration of ∼18000 data points from multiple sources. These sources include observations from ground-based telescopes (ExoClock network and ETD), mid-time values from the literature and light-curves from space telescopes (Kepler/K2 and TESS). With all the above, we manage to collect observations for half of the post-discovery years (median), with data that have a median uncertainty less than one minute. In comparison with literature, the ephemerides generated by the project are more precise and less biased. More than 40\% of the initial literature ephemerides had to be updated to reach the goals of the project, as they were either of low precision or drifting. Moreover, the integrated approach of the project enables both the monitoring of the majority of the Ariel candidates (95\%), and also the identification of missing data. The dedicated ExoClock network effectively supports this task by contributing additional observations when a gap in the data is identified. These results highlight the need for continuous monitoring to increase the observing coverage of the candidate planets. Finally, the extended observing coverage of planets allows us to detect trends (TTVs – Transit Timing Variations) for a sample of 19 planets. All products, data, and codes used in this work are open and accessible to the wider scientific community.
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Photometry: SN2022ewj/NGC3367
Image Info:
Object: SN2022ewj/NGC3357
DATE-OBS: 2022-03-28.66470
EXPTIME(Seconds): 1800
SUBFRMS: 12
OBJCTRA: 10 46 34.63
OBJCTDEC: +13 45 16.6
Binning: 1 X 1
Plate Scale: 1.04″ /Pixel
Orientation: North Right/ East Up
Catalogs & Filter Magnitude Results:
Astrometry Catalog: ATLAS
Photometry Catalog: ATLAS
Imaging Filter: Luminance
Photometry Mag: +14.6 I Band
Instruments:
CCD: KAF-11002M (9.0µm x 9.0µm)
TELESCOPE: C11, 1792.0mm
PRiSMv11, Tycho9.0.1
Site:
ORIGIN: Cepheid Observatory, India
SITELAT: +24:55:00:00
SITELONG:+75:33:58:99
Observers:
Cepheid Observatory
VS Observatory
Remark:
Sky Clear
Photometry: NGTS-5b
Exo-Planet, Class confirmed:
NGTS-5b
Imaged/Calibration/Image solve:
PRiSM v11
Photometry and Data Fitting:
HOPS 3.0.5/Platform: Python 3.7.6
Instrument:
CCD: SX-35 Trius mono
FILTERS: Luminance
TELESCOPE: C11, 1792.0mm
Site:
ORIGIN: Cepheid Observatory India
SITELAT: +24:55:00:00
SITELONG:+75:33:58:99
Observers:
Cepheid Observatory India, VS Observatory India
Remark:
Sky Clear
Photometry: Qatar-8b
Exo-Planet, Class confirmed:
Qatar-8b
Imaged/Calibration/Image solve:
PRiSM v11
Photometry and Data Fitting:
HOPS 3.0.5/Platform: Python 3.7.6
Instrument:
CCD: SX-35 Trius mono
FILTERS: Luminance
TELESCOPE: C11, 1792.0mm
Site:
ORIGIN: Cepheid Observatory India
SITELAT: +24:55:00:00
SITELONG:+75:33:58:99
Observers:
Cepheid Observatory India, VS Observatory India
Remark:
Sky Clear
Photometry: V704 AND
Image Info:
Object: V704 AND
DATE-OBS: 2022-02-12.61896
EXPTIME(Seconds): 720
SUBFRMS: 6
OBJCTRA: 20 44 57.57
OBJCTDEC: +43 31 22.3
Binning: 1 X 1
Plate Scale: 1.04″ /Pixel
Orientation: North UP/ East Left
Catalogs & Filter Magnitude Results:
Astrometry Catalog: ATLAS
Photometry Catalog: ATLAS
Imaging Filter: Luminance
Photometry Mag: +16.2(+/-0.2) V Band
Instruments:
CCD: KAF-11002M (9.0µm x 9.0µm)
TELESCOPE: C11, 1792.0mm
PRiSMv11, Tycho8.7.1
Site:
ORIGIN: Cepheid Observatory, India
SITELAT: +24:55:00:00
SITELONG:+75:33:58:99
Observers:
Cepheid Observatory
VS Observatory
Remark:
Sky Clear
Photometry: ASASSAN-22bs
Image Info:
Object: ASASSAN-22bs
DATE-OBS: 2022-02-11.63326
EXPTIME(Seconds): 4980
SUBFRMS: 83
OBJCTRA: 07 04 04.60
OBJCTDEC: -20 14 21.60
Binning: 1 X 1
Plate Scale: 1.04″ /Pixel
Orientation: North UP/ East Left
Catalogs & Filter Magnitude Results:
Astrometry Catalog: Gaia EDR3
Photometry Catalog: Gaia EDR3
Imaging Filter: Luminance
Photometry Mag: +12.88 Gaia Broadband
Instruments:
CCD: KAF-11002M (9.0µm x 9.0µm)
TELESCOPE: C11, 1792.0mm
PRiSMv11, Tycho8.7.1
Site:
ORIGIN: Cepheid Observatory, India
SITELAT: +24:55:00:00
SITELONG:+75:33:58:99
Observers:
Cepheid Observatory
VS Observatory
Remark:
Sky Clear
Hubble’s variable nebula
Image Info:
Object: Hubble’s variable nebula
DATE-OBS: 2022-02-06T14:38:58.416000
EXPTIME(Seconds): 3960
SUBFRMS: 22
OBJCTRA: 06 39 13.980
OBJCTDEC: +08 43 06.10
Binning: 1 X 1
Plate Scale: 1.04″ /Pixel
Orientation: North UP/ East Left
Catalogs & Filter Magnitude Results:
Astrometry Catalog: Gaia EDR3
Photometry Catalog: Gaia EDR3
Imaging Filter: Luminance
Photometry Mag: +*.* Gaia Broadband
Instruments:
CCD: KAF-11002M (9.0µm x 9.0µm)
TELESCOPE: C11, 1792.0mm
PRiSMv11, Tycho8.7.1
Site:
ORIGIN: Cepheid Observatory, India
SITELAT: +24:55:00:00
SITELONG:+75:33:58:99
Observers:
Cepheid Observatory
VS Observatory
Remark:
Sky Clear
Hubble’s variable nebula is named (like the Hubble telescope itself) after the American astronomer Edwin P. Hubble, who carried out some of the early studies of this object. It is a fan-shaped cloud of gas and dust which is illuminated by R Monocerotis (R Mon), the bright star at the bottom end of the nebula. Dense condensations of dust near the star cast shadows out into the nebula, and as they move the illumination changes, giving rise to the variations first noted by Hubble. The star itself, lying about 2,500 light-years from Earth, cannot be seen directly, but only through light scattered off of dust particles in the surrounding nebula. R Mon is believed to have a mass of about 10 times that of the Sun, and to have an age of only 300,000 years. There is probably a symmetrical counterpart of the fan-shaped nebula on the southern side of the star, but it is heavily obscured from view by dust lying between this lobe and our line of sight. By: https://hubblesite.org
Comet 19P Borrelly
Image Info:
Object: Comet 19P Borrelly
DATE-OBS: 2022-02-02.58957
EXPTIME(Seconds): 3240
SUBFRMS: 27
OBJCTRA: 01 29 39.88
OBJCTDEC: 05 22 28.2
Binning: 1 X 1
Plate Scale: 1.04″ /Pixel
Orientation: North UP/ East Left
Catalogs & Filter Magnitude Results:
Astrometry Catalog: Gaia EDR3
Photometry Catalog: Gaia EDR3
Imaging Filter: Luminance
Photometry Mag: +11.1 Gaia Broadband
Instruments:
CCD: KAF-11002M (9.0µm x 9.0µm)
TELESCOPE: C11, 1792.0mm
PRiSMv11, Tycho8.7.1
Site:
ORIGIN: Cepheid Observatory, India
SITELAT: +24:55:00:00
SITELONG:+75:33:58:99
Observers:
Cepheid Observatory
VS Observatory
Remark:
Sky Clear
Photometry: WASP-183b
Exo-Planet, Class confirmed:
WASP-183b
Imaged/Calibration/Image solve:
PRiSM v11
Photometry and Data Fitting:
HOPS 3.0.5/Platform: Python 3.7.6
Instrument:
CCD: SX-35 Trius mono
FILTERS: Luminance
TELESCOPE: C11, 1792.0mm
Site:
ORIGIN: Cepheid Observatory India
SITELAT: +24:55:00:00
SITELONG:+75:33:58:99
Observers:
Cepheid Observatory India, VS Observatory India
Remark:
Sky Clear