1. HATS-50b through HATS-53b: four transiting hot Jupiters orbiting G-type stars discovered by the HATSouth survey
- Author
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Henning, Th., Mancini, L., Sarkis, P., Bakos, G. A., Hartman, J. D., Bayliss, D., Bento, J., Bhatti, W., Brahm, R., Ciceri, S., Csubry, Z., de Val-Borro, M., Espinoza, N., Fulton, B. J., Howard, A. W., Isaacson, H. T., Jordan, A., Marcy, G. W., Penev, K., Rabus, M., Suc, V., Tan, T. G., Tinney, C. G., Wright, D. J., Zhou, G., Durkan, S., Lazar, J., Papp, I., and Sari, P.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of four close-in transiting exoplanets, HATS-50 through HATS-53, discovered using the HATSouth three-continent network of homogeneous and automated telescopes. These new exoplanets belong to the class of hot Jupiters and orbit G-type dwarf stars, with brightness in the range V=12.5-14.0 mag. While HATS-53 has many physical characteristics similar to the Sun, the other three stars appear to be metal rich, larger and more massive. Three of the new exoplanets, namely HATS-50, HATS-51 and HATS-53, have low density and similar orbital period. Instead, HATS-52 is more dense and has a shorter orbital period. It also receives an intensive radiation from its parent star and, consequently, presents a high equilibrium temperature. HATS-50 shows a marginal additional transit feature consistent with an ultra-short period hot super Neptune, which will be able to be confirmed with TESS photometry., Comment: 28, pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal
- Published
- 2017
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