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TIC 172900988: A Transiting Circumbinary Planet Detected in One Sector of TESS Data

Authors :
Veselin B. Kostov
Brian P. Powell
Jerome A. Orosz
William F. Welsh
William D. Cochran
Karen A. Collins
Michael Endl
Coel Hellier
David W. Latham
Phillip MacQueen
Joshua Pepper
Billy Quarles
Lalitha Sairam
Guillermo Torres
Robert F. Wilson
Serge Bergeron
Pat Boyce
Allyson Bieryla
Robert Buchheim
Caleb Ben Christiansen
David R. Ciardi
Kevin I. Collins
Dennis M. Conti
Scott Dixon
Pere Guerra
Nader Haghighipour
Jeffrey Herman
Eric G. Hintz
Ward S. Howard
Eric L. N. Jensen
John F. Kielkopf
Ethan Kruse
Nicholas M. Law
David Martin
Pierre F. L. Maxted
Benjamin T. Montet
Felipe Murgas
Matt Nelson
Gregory Olmschenk
Sebastian Otero
Robert Quimby
Michael Richmond
Richard P. Schwarz
Avi Shporer
Keivan G. Stassun
Denise C. Stephens
Amaury H. M. J. Triaud
Joe Ulowetz
Bradley S. Walter
Edward Wiley
David Wood
Mitchell Yenawine
Eric Agol
Thomas Barclay
Thomas G. Beatty
Isabelle Boisse
Douglas A. Caldwell
Jessie Christiansen
Knicole D. Colon
Magali Deleuil
Laurance Doyle
Michael Fausnaugh
Gábor Fűrész
Emily A. Gilbert
Guillaume Hébrard
David J. James
Jon Jenkins
Stephen R. Kane
Richard C. Kidwell Jr
Ravi Kopparapu
Gongjie Li
Jack J. Lissauer
Michael B. Lund
Steve R. Majewski
Tsevi Mazeh
Samuel N. Quinn
Elisa Quintana
George R Ricker
Joseph E. Rodriguez
Jason Rowe
Alexander Santerne
Joshua Schlieder
Sara Seager
Matthew R. Standing
Daniel J. Stevens
Eric B. Ting
Roland Vanderspek
Joshua N. Winn
Source :
The Astronomical Journal. 162(6)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2021.

Abstract

We report the first discovery of a transiting circumbinary planet detected from a single sector of Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) data. During Sector 21, the planet TIC 172900988b transited the primary star and then five days later it transited the secondary star. The binary is itself eclipsing, with a period P ≈ 19.7 days and an eccentricity e ≈ 0.45. Archival data from ASAS-SN, Evryscope, KELT, and SuperWASP reveal a prominent apsidal motion of the binary orbit, caused by the dynamical interactions between the binary and the planet. A comprehensive photodynamical analysis of the TESS, archival and follow-up data yields stellar masses and radii of M(1) = 1.2384 ± 0.0007 Mꙩ and R(1) = 1.3827 ± 0.0016 Rꙩ for the primary and M(2) = 1.2019 ± 0.0007 Mꙩ and R(2) = 1.3124 ± 0.0012 Rꙩ for the secondary. The radius of the planet is R(3) = 11.25 ± 0.44 Rꚛ (1.004 ± 0.039R(Jup)). The planet’s mass and orbital properties are not uniquely determined—there are six solutions with nearly equal likelihood. Specifically, we find that the planet’s mass is in the range of 824 ≲ M3 ≲ 981 Mꚛ (2.65 ≲ M3 ≲ 3.09M(Jup)), its orbital period could be 188.8, 190.4, 194.0, 199.0, 200.4, or 204.1 days, and the eccentricity is between 0.02 and 0.09. At V = 10.141 mag, the system is accessible for high-resolution spectroscopic observations, e.g., the Rossiter–McLaughlin effect and transit spectroscopy.

Subjects

Subjects :
Astronomy

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15383881 and 00046256
Volume :
162
Issue :
6
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
The Astronomical Journal
Notes :
981698.01.04.51.05.60.80, , 80NSSC20K0053, , J-090005, , EUH 2020 803193/BEBOP, , RPG2018-418, , 80NSSC20K0054, , 80NSSC20K0850, , NSF AST-1617004, , 80NSSC18K051, , HF2- 51464, , NAS5- 26555
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20220000670
Document Type :
Report
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ac223a