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HAT-P-67b: An Extremely Low Density Saturn Transiting an F-subgiant Confirmed via Doppler Tomography

Authors :
Perry Berlind
R. P. Knox
P. Sári
M. de Val-Borro
Gáspár Á. Bakos
Istvan Papp
G. W. Marcy
R. W. Noyes
Guillermo Torres
J. Lázár
Steve B. Howell
Allyson Bieryla
Benjamin J. Fulton
Waqas Bhatti
Kaloyan Penev
Géza Kovács
Elliott P. Horch
Joel D. Hartman
Lea A. Hirsch
B. Béky
Michael L. Calkins
E. E. Falco
David W. Latham
T. Szklenár
Lars A. Buchhave
S. N. Quinn
Mark E. Everett
Z. Csubry
P. Hinz
Howard Isaacson
Gil Esquerdo
George Zhou
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
American Astronomical Society, 2017.

Abstract

We report the discovery of HAT-P-67b, a hot-Saturn transiting a rapidly rotating F-subgiant. HAT-P-67b has a radius of Rp = 2.085 -0.071/+0.096 RJ,, orbiting a M* = 1.642 -0.072/+0.155 Msun, R* = 2.546 -0.084/+0.099 Rsun host star in a ~4.81-day period orbit. We place an upper limit on the mass of the planet via radial velocity measurements to be Mp < 0.59 MJ, and lower limit of > 0.056 MJ by limitations on Roche lobe overflow. Despite being a subgiant, the host star still exhibits relatively rapid rotation, with a projected rotational velocity of v sin I* = 35.8 +/- 1.1 km/s, making it difficult to precisely determine the mass of the planet using radial velocities. We validated HAT-P-67b via two Doppler tomographic detections of the planetary transit, which eliminated potential eclipsing binary blend scenarios. The Doppler tomographic observations also confirmed that HAT-P-67b has an orbit that is aligned to within 12 degrees, in projection, with the spin of its host star. HAT-P-67b receives strong UV irradiation, and is amongst the one of the lowest density planets known, making it a good candidate for future UV transit observations to search for an extended hydrogen exosphere.<br />13 Pages, 12 Figures, accepted for publication in AJ

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a5e83d221cd57bf527671360781269dd