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One of the closest exoplanet pairs to the 3:2 Mean Motion Resonance: K2-19b \& c

Authors :
Armstrong, David J.
Santerne, Alexandre
Veras, Dimitri
Barros, Susana C. C.
Demangeon, Olivier
Lillo-Box, Jorge
McCormac, James
Osborn, Hugh P.
Tsantaki, Maria
Almenara, José-Manuel
Barrado, David
Boisse, Isabelle
Bonomo, Aldo S.
Bouchy, François
Brown, David J. A.
Bruno, Giovanni
Cerda, Javiera Rey
Courcol, Bastien
Deleuil, Magali
Díaz, Rodrigo F.
Doyle, Amanda P.
Hébrard, Guillaume
Kirk, James
Lam, Kristine W. F.
Pollacco, Don L.
Rajpurohit, Arvind
Spake, Jessica
Walker, Simon R.
Source :
A&A 582, A33 (2015)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The K2 mission has recently begun to discover new and diverse planetary systems. In December 2014 Campaign 1 data from the mission was released, providing high-precision photometry for ~22000 objects over an 80 day timespan. We searched these data with the aim of detecting further important new objects. Our search through two separate pipelines led to the independent discovery of K2-19b \& c, a two-planet system of Neptune sized objects (4.2 and 7.2 $R_\oplus$), orbiting a K dwarf extremely close to the 3:2 mean motion resonance. The two planets each show transits, sometimes simultaneously due to their proximity to resonance and alignment of conjunctions. We obtain further ground based photometry of the larger planet with the NITES telescope, demonstrating the presence of large transit timing variations (TTVs), and use the observed TTVs to place mass constraints on the transiting objects under the hypothesis that the objects are near but not in resonance. We then statistically validate the planets through the \texttt{PASTIS} tool, independently of the TTV analysis.<br />Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, accepted to A&A, updated to match published version

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
A&A 582, A33 (2015)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1503.00692
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201526008