SIMBAD references

2019AJ....158..141Z - Astron. J., 158, 141-141 (2019/October-0)

Two new HATNet hot Jupiters around A stars and the first glimpse at the occurrence rate of hot Jupiters from TESS.

ZHOU G., HUANG C.X., BAKOS G.A., HARTMAN J.D., LATHAM D.W., QUINN S.N., COLLINS K.A., WINN J.N., WONG I., KOVACS G., CSUBRY Z., BHATTI W., PENEV K., BIERYLA A., ESQUERDO G.A., BERLIND P., CALKINS M.L., DE VAL-BORRO M., NOYES R.W., LAZAR J., PAPP I., SARI P., KOVACS T., BUCHHAVE L.A., SZKLENAR T., BEKY B., JOHNSON M.C., COCHRAN W.D., KNIAZEV A.Y., STASSUN K.G., FULTON B.J., SHPORER A., ESPINOZA N., BAYLISS D., EVERETT M., HOWELL S.B., HELLIER C., ANDERSON D.R., CAMERON A.C., WEST R.G., BROWN D.J.A., SCHANCHE N., BARKAOUI K., POZUELOS F., GILLON M., JEHIN E., BENKHALDOUN Z., DAASSOU A., RICKER G., VANDERSPEK R., SEAGER S., JENKINS J.M., LISSAUER J.J., ARMSTRONG J.D., COLLINS K.I., GAN T., HART R., HORNE K., KIELKOPF J.F., NIELSEN L.D., NISHIUMI T., NARITA N., PALLE E., RELLES H.M., SEFAKO R., TAN T.G., DAVIES M., GOEKE R.F., GUERRERO N., HAWORTH K. and VILLANUEVA S.

Abstract (from CDS):

Wide-field surveys for transiting planets are well suited to searching diverse stellar populations, enabling a better understanding of the link between the properties of planets and their parent stars. We report the discovery of HAT-P-69 b (TOI 625.01) and HAT-P-70 b (TOI 624.01), two new hot Jupiters around A stars from the Hungarian-made Automated Telescope Network (HATNet) survey that have also been observed by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite. HAT-P-69 b has a mass of 3.58–0.58+0.58MJup and a radius of 1.676–0.033+0.051RJup and resides in a prograde 4.79 day orbit. HAT-P-70 b has a radius of 1.87–0.10+0.15RJup and a mass constraint of < 6.78(3σ )MJup and resides in a retrograde 2.74 day orbit. We use the confirmation of these planets around relatively massive stars as an opportunity to explore the occurrence rate of hot Jupiters as a function of stellar mass. We define a sample of 47,126 main-sequence stars brighter than Tmag = 10 that yields 31 giant planet candidates, including 18 confirmed planets, 3 candidates, and 10 false positives. We find a net hot Jupiter occurrence rate of 0.41 ± 0.10% within this sample, consistent with the rate measured by Kepler for FGK stars. When divided into stellar mass bins, we find the occurrence rate to be 0.71 ± 0.31% for G stars, 0.43 ± 0.15% for F stars, and 0.26 ± 0.11% for A stars. Thus, at this point, we cannot discern any statistically significant trend in the occurrence of hot Jupiters with stellar mass.

Abstract Copyright: © 2019. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): planetary systems - stars: individual: (HAT-P-69, HAT-P-70, TIC379929661, TIC399870368) - techniques: photometric - techniques: spectroscopic

VizieR on-line data: <Available at CDS (J/AJ/158/141): table2.dat table3.dat table5.dat table6.dat table9.dat table10.dat table11.dat table12.dat>

Simbad objects: 50

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:2019AJ....158..141Z and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu


2023.09.24-05:58:26

© Université de Strasbourg/CNRS

    • Contact