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TESS Timings of 31 Hot Jupiters with Ephemeris Uncertainties

Authors :
Su-Su Shan
Fan Yang
You-Jun Lu
Xing Wei
Wen-Wu Tian
Hai-Yan Zhang
Rui Guo
Xiao-Hong Cui
Ai-Yuan Yang
Bo Zhang
Ji-Feng Liu
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
arXiv, 2021.

Abstract

A precise transit ephemeris serves as the premise for follow-up exoplanet observations. We compare TESS Objects of Interest (TOI) transit timings of 262 hot Jupiters with the archival ephemeris and find 31 of them having TOI timing offsets, among which WASP-161b shows the most significant offset of -203.7$\pm$4.1 minutes. The median value of these offsets is 17.8 minutes, equivalent to 3.6 $\sigma$. We generate TESS timings in each sector for these 31 hot Jupiters, using a self-generated pipeline. The pipeline performs photometric measurements to TESS images and produces transit timings by fitting the light curves. We refine and update the previous ephemeris, based on these TESS timings (uncertainty $\sim$ 1 minute) and a long timing baseline ($\sim 10$ years). Our refined ephemeris gives the transit timing at a median precision of 0.82 minutes until 2025 and 1.21 minutes until 2030. We regard the timing offsets mainly originating from the underestimated ephemeris uncertainty. All the targets with timing offset larger than 10$\sigma$ present earlier timings than the prediction, which cannot be due to underestimated ephemeris uncertainty, apsidal precision, or R$\o$mer effect as those effects should be unsigned. For some particular targets, timing offsets are likely due to tidal dissipation. Our sample leads to the detection of period decaying candidates of WASP-161b and XO-3b reported previously.<br />Comment: Submitted to ApJS; 24 pages

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....18f715c2f45bc76009c621c3b0ba65e8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2111.06678