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KELT-6b: A P ~ 7.9 Day Hot Saturn Transiting a Metal-poor Star with a Long-period Companion

Authors :
Gilbert A. Esquerdo
Eric L. N. Jensen
Sasha Hinkley
Patricia Trueblood
Qingqing Mao
Matthew T. Penny
John F. Kielkopf
Darren L. DePoy
Alexander J. W. Richert
Debra A. Fischer
John Asher Johnson
Robert J. Siverd
Andrew Gould
Allyson Bieryla
Karen A. Collins
Ryan L. Avril
Jennifer L. Marshall
Kaloyan Penev
Joao Gregorio
Richard W. Pogge
Rachel Street
B. Scott Gaudi
Thomas E. Oberst
Lars A. Buchhave
Mark Trueblood
David W. Latham
Andrew W. Howard
Samuel N. Mellon
Ryan J. Oelkers
Justin R. Crepp
Thomas G. Beatty
Mark Manner
Benjamin J. Fulton
Robert P. Stefanik
Michael L. Calkins
Keivan G. Stassun
Jason D. Eastman
Phillip Cargile
Kim K. McLeod
Perry Berlind
Claude E. Mack
Joshua Pepper
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
American Astronomical Society, 2014.

Abstract

We report the discovery of KELT-6b, a mildly-inflated Saturn-mass planet transiting a metal-poor host. The initial transit signal was identified in KELT-North survey data, and the planetary nature of the occulter was established using a combination of follow-up photometry, high-resolution imaging, high-resolution spectroscopy, and precise radial velocity measurements. The fiducial model from a global analysis including constraints from isochrones indicates that the V=10.38 host star (BD+31 2447) is a mildly evolved, late-F star with T_eff=6102 \pm 43 K, log(g_*)=4.07_{-0.07}^{+0.04} and [Fe/H]=-0.28 \pm 0.04, with an inferred mass M_*=1.09 \pm 0.04 M_sun and radius R_star=1.58_{-0.09}^{+0.16} R_sun. The planetary companion has mass M_P=0.43 \pm 0.05 M_J, radius R_P=1.19_{-0.08}^{+0.13} R_J, surface gravity log(g_P)=2.86_{-0.08}^{+0.06}, and density rho_P=0.31_{-0.08}^{+0.07} g~cm^{-3}. The planet is on an orbit with semimajor axis a=0.079 \pm 0.001 AU and eccentricity e=0.22_{-0.10}^{+0.12}, which is roughly consistent with circular, and has ephemeris of T_c(BJD_TDB)=2456347.79679 \pm 0.00036 and P=7.845631 \pm 0.000046 d. Equally plausible fits that employ empirical constraints on the host star parameters rather than isochrones yield a larger planet mass and radius by ~4-7%. KELT-6b has surface gravity and incident flux similar to HD209458b, but orbits a host that is more metal poor than HD209458 by ~0.3 dex. Thus, the KELT-6 system offers an opportunity to perform a comparative measurement of two similar planets in similar environments around stars of very different metallicities. The precise radial velocity data also reveal an acceleration indicative of a longer-period third body in the system, although the companion is not detected in Keck adaptive optics images.<br />Comment: Published in AJ, 17 pages, 15 figures, 6 tables

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cbd992ef98b6d22e88256d98095554aa