331 research outputs found
An extremely low-density and temperate giant exoplanet
Transiting extrasolar planets are key objects in the study of the formation, migration, and evolution of planetary systems. In particular, the exploration of the atmospheres of giant planets, through transmission spectroscopy or direct imaging, has revealed a large diversity in their chemical composition and physical properties. Studying these giant planets allows one to test the global climate models that are used for the Earth and other solar system planets. However, these studies are mostly limited either to highly-irradiated transiting giant planets or directly-imaged giant planets at large separations. Here we report the physical characterisation of the planets in a bright multi-planetary system (HIP41378) in which the outer planet, HIP41378 f is a Saturn-sized planet (9.2 ± 0.1 Râ) with an anomalously low density of 0.09 ± 0.02 g cmâ»Âł that is not yet understood. Its equilibrium temperature is about 300 K. Therefore, it represents a planet with a mild temperature, in between the hot Jupiters and the colder giant planets of the Solar System. It opens a new window for atmospheric characterisation of giant exoplanets with a moderate irradiation, with the next-generation space telescopes such as JWST and ARIEL as well as the extremely-large ground-based telescopes. HIP41378 f is thus an important laboratory to understand the effect of the irradiation on the physical properties and chemical composition of the atmosphere of planets
EPIC 220204960: A Quadruple Star System Containing Two Strongly Interacting Eclipsing Binaries
We present a strongly interacting quadruple system associated with the K2
target EPIC 220204960. The K2 target itself is a Kp = 12.7 magnitude star at
Teff ~ 6100 K which we designate as "B-N" (blue northerly image). The host of
the quadruple system, however, is a Kp = 17 magnitude star with a composite
M-star spectrum, which we designate as "R-S" (red southerly image). With a 3.2"
separation and similar radial velocities and photometric distances, 'B-N' is
likely physically associated with 'R-S', making this a quintuple system, but
that is incidental to our main claim of a strongly interacting quadruple system
in 'R-S'. The two binaries in 'R-S' have orbital periods of 13.27 d and 14.41
d, respectively, and each has an inclination angle of >89 degrees. From our
analysis of radial velocity measurements, and of the photometric lightcurve, we
conclude that all four stars are very similar with masses close to 0.4 Msun.
Both of the binaries exhibit significant ETVs where those of the primary and
secondary eclipses 'diverge' by 0.05 days over the course of the 80-day
observations. Via a systematic set of numerical simulations of quadruple
systems consisting of two interacting binaries, we conclude that the outer
orbital period is very likely to be between 300 and 500 days. If sufficient
time is devoted to RV studies of this faint target, the outer orbit should be
measurable within a year.Comment: 20 pages, 18 figures, 7 tables; accepted for publication in MNRA
Evaluation of the Free Energy of Two-Dimensional Yang-Mills Theory
The free energy in the weak-coupling phase of two-dimensional Yang-Mills
theory on a sphere for SO(N) and Sp(N) is evaluated in the 1/N expansion using
the techniques of Gross and Matytsin. Many features of Yang-Mills theory are
universal among different gauge groups in the large N limit, but significant
differences arise in subleading order in 1/N.Comment: 10 pages; no figures; LaTe
KELT-11b: A Highly Inflated Sub-Saturn Exoplanet Transiting the V=8 Subgiant HD 93396
We report the discovery of a transiting exoplanet, KELT-11b, orbiting the
bright () subgiant HD 93396. A global analysis of the system shows that
the host star is an evolved subgiant star with K,
, , log , and [Fe/H].
The planet is a low-mass gas giant in a day orbit,
with , , g cm, surface gravity log , and equilibrium temperature K. KELT-11 is the brightest known transiting exoplanet host
in the southern hemisphere by more than a magnitude, and is the 6th brightest
transit host to date. The planet is one of the most inflated planets known,
with an exceptionally large atmospheric scale height (2763 km), and an
associated size of the expected atmospheric transmission signal of 5.6%. These
attributes make the KELT-11 system a valuable target for follow-up and
atmospheric characterization, and it promises to become one of the benchmark
systems for the study of inflated exoplanets.Comment: 15 pages, Submitted to AAS Journal
Four sub-Saturns with dissimilar densities: windows into planetary cores and envelopes
We present results from a Keck/HIRES radial velocity campaign to study four sub-Saturn-sized planets, K2-27b, K2-32b, K2-39b, and K2-108b, with the goal of understanding their masses, orbits, and heavy-element enrichment. The planets have similar sizes (RP=4.5-5.5 ), but have dissimilar masses (MP=16-60 ), implying a diversity in their core and envelope masses. K2-32b is the least massive (MP = 16.5 ± 2.7 M) and orbits in close proximity to two sub-Neptunes near a 3:2:1 period commensurability. K2-27b and K2-39b are significantly more massive at MP = 30.9 ± 4.6 M and MP = 39.8 ± 4.4 M, respectively, and show no signs of additional planets. K2-108b is the most massive at MP = 59.4 ± 4.4 M, implying a large reservoir of heavy elements of about â50 . Sub-Saturns as a population have a large diversity in planet mass at a given size. They exhibit remarkably little correlation between mass and size; sub-Saturns range from â6-60 M, regardless of size. We find a strong correlation between planet mass and host star metallicity, suggesting that metal-rich disks form more massive planet cores. The most massive sub-Saturns tend to lack detected companions and have moderately eccentric orbits, perhaps as a result of a previous epoch of dynamical instability. Finally, we observe only a weak correlation between the planet envelope fraction and present-day equilibrium temperature, suggesting that photo-evaporation does not play a dominant role in determining the amount of gas sub-Saturns accrete from their protoplanetary disks
A transient transit signature associated with the young star RIK-210
We find transient transit-like dimming events within the K2 time series photometry of the young star RIK-210 in the Upper Scorpius OB association. These dimming events are variable in depth, duration, and morphology. High spatial resolution imaging revealed that the star is single and radial velocity monitoring indicated that the dimming events cannot be due to an eclipsing stellar or brown dwarf companion. Archival and follow-up photometry suggest the dimming events are transient in nature. The variable morphology of the dimming events suggests they are not due to a single spherical body. The ingress of each dimming event is always shallower than egress, as one would expect for an orbiting body with a leading tail. The dimming events are periodic and synchronous with the stellar rotation. However, we argue it is unlikely the dimming events could be attributed to anything on the stellar surface based on the observed depths and durations. Variable obscuration by a protoplanetary disk is unlikely on the basis that the star is not actively accreting and lacks the infrared excess associated with an inner disk. Rather, we explore the possibilities that the dimming events are due to magnetospheric clouds, a transiting protoplanet surrounded by circumplanetary dust and debris, eccentric orbiting bodies undergoing periodic tidal disruption, or an extended field of dust or debris near the corotation radius.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
HAT-P-44b, HAT-P-45b, and HAT-P-46b: Three Transiting Hot Jupiters in Possible Multi-Planet Systems
We report the discovery by the HATNet survey of three new transiting
extrasolar planets orbiting moderately bright (V=13.2, 12.8 and 11.9) stars.
The planets have orbital periods of 4.3012, 3.1290, and 4.4631 days, masses of
0.39, 0.89, and 0.49 Mjup, and radii of 1.28, 1.43, and 1.28 Rjup. The stellar
hosts have masses of 0.94, 1.26, and 1.28 Msun. Each system shows significant
systematic variations in its residual radial velocities indicating the possible
presence of additional components. Based on its Bayesian evidence, the
preferred model for HAT-P-44 consists of two planets, including the transiting
component, with the outer planet having a period of 220 d and a minimum mass of
1.6 Mjup. Due to aliasing we cannot rule out an alternative solution for the
outer planet having a period of 438 d and a minimum mass of 3.7 Mjup. For
HAT-P-45 at present there is not enough data to justify the additional free
parameters included in a multi-planet model, in this case a single-planet
solution is preferred, but the required jitter of 22.5 +- 6.3 m/s is relatively
high for a star of this type. For HAT-P-46 the preferred solution includes a
second planet having a period of 78 d and a minimum mass of 2.0 Mjup, however
the preference for this model over a single-planet model is not very strong.
While substantial uncertainties remain as to the presence and/or properties of
the outer planetary companions in these systems, the inner transiting planets
are well characterized with measured properties that are fairly robust against
changes in the assumed models for the outer planets. Continued RV monitoring is
necessary to fully characterize these three planetary systems, the properties
of which may have important implications for understanding the formation of hot
Jupiters.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures, 14 tables, submitted to A
KELT-8b: A highly inflated transiting hot Jupiter and a new technique for extracting high-precision radial velocities from noisy spectra
We announce the discovery of a highly inflated transiting hot Jupiter
discovered by the KELT-North survey. A global analysis including constraints
from isochrones indicates that the V = 10.8 host star (HD 343246) is a mildly
evolved, G dwarf with K, , , an inferred mass
M, and radius
R. The planetary companion has mass , radius
, surface gravity , and density
g cm. The planet is on a roughly
circular orbit with semimajor axis AU and
eccentricity . The best-fit linear ephemeris is
BJD and
days. This planet is one of the most inflated of all known transiting
exoplanets, making it one of the few members of a class of extremely low
density, highly-irradiated gas giants. The low stellar and large
implied radius are supported by stellar density constraints from follow-up
light curves, plus an evolutionary and space motion analysis. We also develop a
new technique to extract high precision radial velocities from noisy spectra
that reduces the observing time needed to confirm transiting planet candidates.
This planet boasts deep transits of a bright star, a large inferred atmospheric
scale height, and a high equilibrium temperature of
K, assuming zero albedo and perfect heat redistribution, making it one of the
best targets for future atmospheric characterization studies.Comment: Submitted to ApJ, feedback is welcom
Characterizing K2 Candidate Planetary Systems Orbiting Low-Mass Stars II: Planetary Systems Observed During Campaigns 1-7
We recently used near-infrared spectroscopy to improve the characterization of 76 low-mass stars around which K2 had detected 79 candidate transiting planets. 29 of these worlds were new discoveries that had not previously been published. We calculate the false positive probabilities that the transit-like signals are actually caused by non-planetary astrophysical phenomena and reject five new transit-like events and three previously reported events as false positives. We also statistically validate 17 planets (7 of which were previously unpublished), confirm the earlier validation of 22 planets, and announce 17 newly discovered planet candidates. Revising the properties of the associated planet candidates based on the updated host star characteristics and refitting the transit photometry, we find that our sample contains 21 planets or planet candidates with radii smaller than 1.25 Râ, 18 super-Earths (1.25â2 Râ), 21 small Neptunes (2â4 Râ), three large Neptunes (4â6 Râ), and eight giant planets (>6 Râ). Most of these planets are highly irradiated, but EPIC 206209135.04 (K2-72e, 1.29^(+0.14)_(-0.13) Râ), EPIC 211988320.01 (R_p = 2.86^(+0.16)_(-0.15) Râ), and EPIC 212690867.01 (2.20^(+0.19)_(-0.18) Râ) orbit within optimistic habitable zone boundaries set by the "recent Venus" inner limit and the "early Mars" outer limit. In total, our planet sample includes eight moderately irradiated 1.5â3 Râ planet candidates (F_p ⟠20 Fâ) orbiting brighter stars (Ks < 11) that are well-suited for atmospheric investigations with the Hubble, Spitzer, and/or James Webb Space Telescopes. Five validated planets orbit relatively bright stars (Kp < 12.5) and are expected to yield radial velocity semi-amplitudes of at least 2 m s^(â1). Accordingly, they are possible targets for radial velocity mass measurement with current facilities or the upcoming generation of red optical and near-infrared high-precision RV spectrographs
Two Planets Straddling the Habitable Zone of The Nearby K dwarf Gl 414A
We present the discovery of two planets orbiting the nearby (D = 11.9 pc) K7 dwarf Gl 414A. Gl 414A b is a sub-Neptune mass planet with M_b sin i_b = 9.28^(+3.19)_(â2.54) M_â and a semi-major axis of 0.24 ± 0.01 au. Gl 414A c is a sub-Saturn mass planet with M_c sin i_c = 59.48^(+9.98)_(â9.69) M_â and a semi-major axis of 1.43 ± 0.06 au. We jointly analyzed radial velocity data from Keck/HIRES and the Automated Planet Finder at Lick Observatory, as well as photometric data from KELT, to detect the two planets as well as two additional signals related to the rotationally-modulated activity and the long term magnetic activity cycle of the star. The outer planet in this system is a potential candidate for future direct imaging missions
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