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 Teff=5754−55+54 K, logg=4.078−0.054+0.049, [Fe/H]=0.272±0.038, an inferred mass
M∗=1.211−0.066+0.078 M⊙, and radius
R∗=1.67−0.12+0.14 R⊙. The planetary companion has mass MP=0.867−0.061+0.065MJ, radius RP=1.86−0.16+0.18RJ, surface gravity loggP=2.793−0.075+0.072, and density
ρP=0.167−0.038+0.047 g cm−3. The planet is on a roughly
circular orbit with semimajor axis a=0.04571−0.00084+0.00096 AU and
eccentricity e=0.035−0.025+0.050. The best-fit linear ephemeris is
T0=2456883.4803±0.0007 BJDTDB and P=3.24406±0.00016
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 logg 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 Teq=1675−55+61
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