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TOI-150b and TOI-163b: two transiting hot Jupiters, one eccentric and one inflated, revealed by TESS near and at the edge of the JWST CVZ

Authors :
Thomas Henning
Chris Stockdale
Diana Kossakowski
Maxime Marmier
Rachel A. Matson
Joshua E. Schlieder
Edward H. Morgan
Vincent Suc
Jeffrey C. Smith
Jie Li
Joshua N. Winn
Francisco J. Pozuelos
Gáspár Á. Bakos
Jon M. Jenkins
Elliott P. Horch
Eric L. N. Jensen
Stéphane Udry
Michaël Gillon
Néstor Espinoza
Rafael Brahm
Waqas Bhatti
Erica J. Gonzales
David R. Ciardi
Emmanuel Jehin
Damien Ségransan
Liang Yu
Elisabeth Matthews
Karen A. Collins
Martin Kürster
George R. Ricker
Martin Schlecker
Francesco Pepe
Khalid Barkaoui
Phil Evans
Andrés Jordán
Sara Seager
Avi Shporer
J. Villasenor
David J. Osip
Steve B. Howell
Paula Sarkis
Kevin I. Collins
Christophe Lovis
Howard M. Relles
Mark E. Rose
Ian J. M. Crossfield
Z. Csubry
Oliver Turner
Felipe Rojas
Tess R. Jaffe
David Charbonneau
Scott Dynes
François Bouchy
Louise D. Nielsen
Source :
arXiv
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We present the discovery of TYC9191-519-1b (TOI-150b, TIC 271893367) and HD271181b (TOI-163b, TIC 179317684), two hot Jupiters initially detected using 30-minute cadence Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite TESS photometry from Sector 1 and thoroughly characterized through follow-up photometry (CHAT, Hazelwood, LCO/CTIO, El Sauce, TRAPPIST-S), high-resolution spectroscopy (FEROS, CORALIE) and speckle imaging (Gemini/DSSI), confirming the planetary nature of the two signals. A simultaneous joint fit of photometry and radial velocity using a new fitting package juliet reveals that TOI-150b is a $1.254\pm0.016\ R_J$, massive ($2.61^{+0.19}_{-0.12}\ M_J$) hot Jupiter in a $5.857$-day orbit, while TOI-163b is an inflated ($R_P$ = $1.478^{+0.022}_{-0.029} R_J$, $M_P$ = $1.219\pm0.11 M_J$) hot Jupiter on a $P$ = $4.231$-day orbit; both planets orbit F-type stars. A particularly interesting result is that TOI-150b shows an eccentric orbit ($e=0.262^{+0.045}_{-0.037}$), which is quite uncommon among hot Jupiters. We estimate that this is consistent, however, with the circularization timescale which is slightly larger than the age of the system. These two hot Jupiters are both prime candidates for further characterization --- in particular, both are excellent candidates for determining spin-orbit alignments via the Rossiter-McLaughlin (RM) effect and for characterizing atmospheric thermal structures using secondary eclipse observations considering they are both located closely to the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Continuous Viewing Zone (CVZ).<br />referee report submitted to MNRAS

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
arXiv
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b8b0e95b3bccc0a43f049f0a4d57f687