Back to Search Start Over

A Highly Eccentric Warm Jupiter Orbiting TIC 237913194

Authors :
Schlecker, Martin
Kossakowski, Diana
Brahm, Rafael
Espinoza, Néstor
Henning, Thomas
Carone, Ludmila
Molaverdikhani, Karan
Trifonov, Trifon
Mollière, Paul
Hobson, Melissa J.
Jordán, Andrés
Rojas, Felipe I.
Klahr, Hubert
Sarkis, Paula
Bakos, Gáspár Á.
Bhatti, Waqas
Osip, David
Suc, Vincent
Ricker, George
Vanderspek, Roland
Latham, David W.
Seager, Sara
Winn, Joshua N.
Jenkins, Jon M.
Vezie, Michael
Villaseñor, Jesus Noel
Rose, Mark E.
Rodriguez, David R.
Rodriguez, Joseph E.
Quinn, Samuel N.
Shporer, Avi
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The orbital parameters of warm Jupiters serve as a record of their formation history, providing constraints on formation scenarios for giant planets on close and intermediate orbits. Here, we report the discovery of TIC 237913194b, detected in full frame images from Sectors 1 and 2 of TESS, ground-based photometry (CHAT, LCOGT), and FEROS radial velocity time series. We constrain its mass to $M_\mathrm{P} = 1.942_{-0.091}^{+0.091}\,{\rm M_{J}} $, and its radius to $R_\mathrm{P} = 1.117_{-0.047}^{+0.054}\,{\rm R_J}$, implying a bulk density similar to Neptune's. It orbits a G-type star (${\rm M}_{\star} = 1.026_{-0.055}^{+0.057}\,{\rm M}_{\odot}$, $V = 12.1$ mag) with a period of $15.17\,$d on one of the most eccentric orbits of all known warm giants ($e \approx 0.58$). This extreme dynamical state points to a past interaction with an additional, undetected massive companion. A tidal evolution analysis showed a large tidal dissipation timescale, suggesting that the planet is not a progenitor for a hot Jupiter caught during its high-eccentricity migration. TIC 237913194b further represents an attractive opportunity to study the energy deposition and redistribution in the atmosphere of a warm Jupiter with high eccentricity.<br />Comment: 20 pages, 14 figures. Accepted for publication in AJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2010.03570
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/abbe03