HAT-P-67b: An Extremely Low Density Saturn Transiting an F-Subgiant Confirmed via Doppler Tomography

We report the discovery of HAT-P-67b, a hot-Saturn transiting a rapidly rotating F-subgiant. HAT-P-67b has a radius of Rp = 2.085 -0.071/+0.096 RJ,, orbiting a M* = 1.642 -0.072/+0.155 Msun, R* = 2.546 -0.084/+0.099 Rsun host star in a ~4.81-day period orbit. We place an upper limit on the mass of t...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2017-03
Hauptverfasser: Zhou, G, Bakos, G Á, Hartman, J D, Latham, D W, Torres, G, Bhatti, W, Penev, K, Buchhave, L, Kovács, G, Bieryla, A, Quinn, S, Isaacson, H, Fulton, B J, Falco, E, Csubry, Z, Everett, M, Szklenar, T, Esquerdo, G, Berlind, P, Calkins, M L, Béky, B, Knox, R P, Hinz, P, Horch, E P, Hirsch, L, Howell, S B, Noyes, R W, Marcy, G, M de Val-Borro, Lázár, J, Papp, I, Sári, P
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We report the discovery of HAT-P-67b, a hot-Saturn transiting a rapidly rotating F-subgiant. HAT-P-67b has a radius of Rp = 2.085 -0.071/+0.096 RJ,, orbiting a M* = 1.642 -0.072/+0.155 Msun, R* = 2.546 -0.084/+0.099 Rsun host star in a ~4.81-day period orbit. We place an upper limit on the mass of the planet via radial velocity measurements to be Mp < 0.59 MJ, and lower limit of > 0.056 MJ by limitations on Roche lobe overflow. Despite being a subgiant, the host star still exhibits relatively rapid rotation, with a projected rotational velocity of v sin I* = 35.8 +/- 1.1 km/s, making it difficult to precisely determine the mass of the planet using radial velocities. We validated HAT-P-67b via two Doppler tomographic detections of the planetary transit, which eliminated potential eclipsing binary blend scenarios. The Doppler tomographic observations also confirmed that HAT-P-67b has an orbit that is aligned to within 12 degrees, in projection, with the spin of its host star. HAT-P-67b receives strong UV irradiation, and is amongst the one of the lowest density planets known, making it a good candidate for future UV transit observations to search for an extended hydrogen exosphere.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.1702.00106