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The TESS Grand Unified Hot Jupiter Survey. I. Ten TESS Planets

Authors :
Samuel W. Yee
Joshua N. Winn
Joel D. Hartman
Joseph E. Rodriguez
George Zhou
Samuel N. Quinn
David W. Latham
Allyson Bieryla
Karen A. Collins
Brett C. Addison
Isabel Angelo
Khalid Barkaoui
Paul Benni
Andrew W. Boyle
Rafael Brahm
R. Paul Butler
David R. Ciardi
Kevin I. Collins
Dennis M. Conti
Jeffrey D. Crane
Fei Dai
Courtney D. Dressing
Jason D. Eastman
Zahra Essack
Raquel Forés-Toribio
Elise Furlan
Tianjun Gan
Steven Giacalone
Holden Gill
Eric Girardin
Thomas Henning
Christopher E. Henze
Melissa J. Hobson
Jonathan Horner
Andrew W. Howard
Steve B. Howell
Chelsea X. Huang
Howard Isaacson
Jon M. Jenkins
Eric L. N. Jensen
Andrés Jordán
Stephen R. Kane
John F. Kielkopf
Slawomir Lasota
Alan M. Levine
Jack Lubin
Andrew W. Mann
Bob Massey
Kim K. McLeod
Matthew W. Mengel
Jose A. Muñoz
Felipe Murgas
Enric Palle
Peter Plavchan
Adam Popowicz
Don J. Radford
George R. Ricker
Pamela Rowden
Boris S. Safonov
Arjun B. Savel
Richard P. Schwarz
S. Seager
Ramotholo Sefako
Avi Shporer
Gregor Srdoc
Ivan S. Strakhov
Johanna K. Teske
C. G. Tinney
Dakotah Tyler
Robert A. Wittenmyer
Hui Zhang
Carl Ziegler
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We report the discovery of ten short-period giant planets (TOI-2193A b, TOI-2207 b, TOI-2236 b, TOI-2421 b, TOI-2567 b, TOI-2570 b, TOI-3331 b, TOI-3540A b, TOI-3693 b, TOI-4137 b). All of the planets were identified as planet candidates based on periodic flux dips observed by NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). The signals were confirmed to be from transiting planets using ground-based time-series photometry, high angular resolution imaging, and high-resolution spectroscopy coordinated with the TESS Follow-up Observing Program. The ten newly discovered planets orbit relatively bright F and G stars ($G < 12.5$,~$T_\mathrm{eff}$ between 4800 and 6200 K). The planets' orbital periods range from 2 to 10~days, and their masses range from 0.2 to 2.2 Jupiter masses. TOI-2421 b is notable for being a Saturn-mass planet and TOI-2567 b for being a ``sub-Saturn'', with masses of $0.322\pm 0.073$ and $0.195\pm 0.030$ Jupiter masses, respectively. In most cases, we have little information about the orbital eccentricities. Two exceptions are TOI-2207 b, which has an 8-day period and a detectably eccentric orbit ($e = 0.17\pm0.05$), and TOI-3693 b, a 9-day planet for which we can set an upper limit of $e < 0.052$. The ten planets described here are the first new planets resulting from an effort to use TESS data to unify and expand on the work of previous ground-based transit surveys in order to create a large and statistically useful sample of hot Jupiters.<br />44 pages, 15 tables, 21 figures; revised version submitted to AJ

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....91a95a38159e46f15a5ae204647981cf