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NGTS-10b: The shortest period hot Jupiter yet discovered

Authors :
McCormac, James
Gillen, Edward
Jackman, James A. G.
Brown, David J. A.
Bayliss, Daniel
Wheatley, Peter J.
West, Richard G.
Anderson, David R.
Armstrong, David J.
Bouchy, Francois
Briegal, Joshua T.
Burleigh, Matthew R.
Cabrera, Juan
Casewell, Sarah L.
Chaushev, Alexander
Chazelas, Bruno
Chote, Paul
Cooke, Benjamin F.
Costes, Jean C.
Csizmadia, Szilard
Eigmuller, Philipp
Erikson, Anders
Foxell, Emma
Gaensicke, Boris T.
Goad, Michael R.
Gunther, Maximilian N.
Hodgkin, Simon T.
Hooton, Matthew J.
Jenkins, James S.
Lambert, Gregory
Lendl, Monika
Longstaff, Emma
Louden, Tom
Moyano, Maximiliano
Nielsen, Louise D.
Pollacco, Don
Queloz, Didier
Rauer, Heike
Raynard, Liam
Smith, Alexis M. S.
Smalley, Barry
Soto, Maritza
Turner, Oliver
Udry, Stephane
Vines, Jose I.
Walker, Simon. R.
Watson, Christopher A.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We report the discovery of a new ultra-short period transiting hot Jupiter from the Next Generation Transit Survey (NGTS). NGTS-10b has a mass and radius of $2.162\,^{+0.092}_{-0.107}$ M$_{\rm J}$ and $1.205\,^{+0.117}_{-0.083}$ R$_{\rm J}$ and orbits its host star with a period of $0.7668944\pm0.0000003$ days, making it the shortest period hot Jupiter yet discovered. The host is a $10.4\pm2.5$ Gyr old K5V star ($T_\mathrm{eff}$=$4400\pm100$\,K) of Solar metallicity ([Fe/H] = $-0.02\pm0.12$\,dex) showing moderate signs of stellar activity. NGTS-10b joins a short list of ultra-short period Jupiters that are prime candidates for the study of star-planet tidal interactions. NGTS-10b orbits its host at just $1.46\pm0.18$ Roche radii, and we calculate a median remaining inspiral time of $38$\,Myr and a potentially measurable transit time shift of $7$\,seconds over the coming decade, assuming a stellar tidal quality factor $Q'_{\rm s}=2\times10^{7}$.<br />Comment: 16 pages, 19 figures and 5 tables. Submitted 27 Sept 2019. Accepted 10 Jan 2020. Published 20 Feb 2020

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1909.12424
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/staa115