A Jovian planet in an eccentric 11.5 day orbit around HD 1397 discovered by TESS
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Published:2019-03
Issue:
Volume:623
Page:A100
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ISSN:0004-6361
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Container-title:Astronomy & Astrophysics
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language:
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Short-container-title:A&A
Author:
Nielsen L. D.ORCID, Bouchy F., Turner O., Giles H., Mascareño A. Suárez, Lovis C., Marmier M., Pepe F., Ségransan D., Udry S., Otegi J. F., Ottoni G., Stalport M., Ricker G., Vanderspek R., Latham D. W., Seager S., Winn J. N., Jenkins J. M., Kane S. R., Wittenmyer R. A., Bowler B., Crossfield I., Horner J., Kielkopf J., Morton T., Plavchan P., Tinney C. G., Zhang Hui, Wright D. J., Mengel M. W., Clark J. T., Okumura J., Addison B., Caldwell D. A., Cartwright S. M., Collins K. A., Francis J., Guerrero N., Huang C. X., Matthews E. C., Pepper J., Rose M., Villaseñor J., Wohler B., Stassun K., Howell S., Ciardi D., Gonzales E., Matson R., Beichman C., Schlieder J.
Abstract
The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite TESS has begun a new age of exoplanet discoveries around bright host stars. We present the discovery of HD 1397b (TOI-120.01), a giant planet in an 11.54-day eccentric orbit around a bright (V= 7.9) G-type subgiant. We estimate both host star and planetary parameters consistently usingEXOFASTv2based on TESS time-series photometry of transits and radial velocity measurements with CORALIE and MINERVA-Australis. We also present high angular resolution imaging with NaCo to rule out any nearby eclipsing binaries. We find that HD 1397b is a Jovian planet, with a mass of 0.415 ± 0.020MJand a radius of 1.026 ± 0.026RJ. Characterising giant planets in short-period eccentric orbits, such as HD 1397b, is important for understanding and testing theories for the formation and migration of giant planets as well as planet-star interactions.
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics
Cited by
38 articles.
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