The TRES RV measurements of KELT-20b with the best fit model shown in red.
An
international team of astronomers reports the discovery of a new "hot
Jupiter" exoplanet with a short orbital period of just three and a half
days. The newly detected giant planet, designated KELT-20b, circles a rapidly
rotating star known as HD 185603 (or KELT-20). The finding was presented in a
paper published July 5 on arXiv.org.
The new
planet was identified by a group of researchers led by Michael Lund of the
Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. The astronomers observed HD
185603 using the KELT-North telescope in Arizona to identify the initial
transit signal of a potential planet. The observations were made as part of the
Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (KELT) survey, which is dedicated to
searching for transiting exoplanets around bright stars.
The
observational campaign was carried out from May to November 2014, and allowed
the scientists to identify KELT-20b as an exoplanet candidate. Afterwards, the
researchers analyzed archival data and conducted follow-up observations and
high-resolution imaging of the object, which resulted in confirming the planetary
status of KELT-20b.
"We
identified the initial transit signal in KELT-North survey data. Archival and
follow-up photometry, the Gaia parallax, radial velocities, Doppler tomography,
and adaptive optics imaging were used to confirm the planetary nature of the
companion and characterize the system," the authors wrote in the paper.
According
to the study, KELT-20b has a radius of about 1.73 Jupiter radii and a maximum
mass of 3.5 Jupiter masses. It orbits its host every 3.47 days at a distance of
approximately 0.05 AU. The planet's equilibrium temperature is about 2,261 K.
The derived
parameters of KELT-20b indicate that is belongs to group of planets known as
"hot Jupiters." These exoworlds are similar in characteristics to the
solar system's biggest planet, with orbital periods of less than 10 days. They
have high surface temperatures, as they orbit their host stars very closely.
The
researchers emphasized that the newly discovered planetary system is
extraordinary in several ways and that the planet itself is unusual when compared
to other "hot Jupiters."
"The
KELT-20 system represents one of the most extreme transiting hot Jupiter
systems, and indeed, one of the most extreme transiting exoplanet systems yet
discovered by several measures. The host star is both exceptionally bright (V ∼ 7.6), and exceptionally hot (Teff ~ 8,700 K). It is only the sixth A
star known to host a transiting giant companion. The planet itself is on a
relatively short period orbit of P ~ 3.5 days, and thus receives an extreme amount of stellar insolation,
resulting in an estimated equilibrium temperature of ∼ 2,250 K," the team concluded.
They added
that KELT-20b is a great example of a "hot Jupiter" suffering from
extreme stellar irradiation, particularly in ultraviolet wavelengths.
Therefore, the planet is an excellent target for detailed follow-up
observations and characterization.
https://arxiv.org/abs/1707.01518
Read more
at: https://phys.org/news/2017-07-hot-jupiter-short-orbital-period.html#jCp
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