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Measurements of Transit Timing Variations for WASP-5b

Authors :
David P. Bennett
Yasushi Muraki
Yoshitaka Itow
John B. Hearnshaw
Winston L. Sweatman
Daisuke Suzuki
Teruyuki Hirano
Norio Narita
Kimiaki Masuda
S. Kobara
Motohide Tamura
D. J. Sullivan
K. Nishimoto
S. Hosaka
K. Furusawa
M. Nagaya
Koki Kamiya
Y. C. Perrott
Fumio Abe
T. Saito
A. V. Korpela
Paul J. Tristram
K. Wada
Kouji Ohnishi
Takahiro Sumi
N. Miyake
C. H. Ling
S. Makita
L. Skuljan
Nicholas J. Rattenbury
Yutaka Matsubara
K. Omori
W. Lin
Ian A. Bond
P. M. Kilmartin
F. Hayashi
Akihiko Fukui
Source :
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan. 63:287-300
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2011.

Abstract

We have observed 7 new transits of the `hot Jupiter' WASP-5b using a 61 cm telescope located in New Zealand, in order to search for transit timing variations (TTVs) which can be induced by additional bodies existing in the system. When combined with other available photometric and radial velocity (RV) data, we find that its transit timings do not match a linear ephemeris; the best fit \chi^2 values is 32.2 with 9 degrees of freedom which corresponds to a confidence level of 99.982 % or 3.7 \sigma. This result indicates that excess variations of transit timings has been observed, due either to unknown systematic effects or possibly to real TTVs. The TTV amplitude is as large as 50 s, and if this is real, it cannot be explained by other effects than that due to an additional body or bodies. From the RV data, we put an upper limit on the RV amplitude caused by the possible secondary body (planet) as 21 m s^{-1}, which corresponds to its mass of 22-70 M_{Earth} over the orbital period ratio of the two planets from 0.2 to 5.0. From the TTVs data, using the numerical simulations, we place more stringent limits down to 2 M_{Earth} near 1:2 and 2:1 mean motion resonances (MMRs) with WASP-5b at the 3 \sigma level, assuming that the two planets are co-planer. We also put an upper limit on excess of Trojan mass as 43 M_{Earth} (3 \sigma) using both RV and photometric data. We also find that if the possible secondary planet has non- or a small eccentricity, its orbit would likely be near low-order MMRs. Further follow-up photometric and spectroscopic observations will be required to confirm the reality of the TTV signal, and results such as these will provide important information for the migration mechanisms of planetary systems.<br />Comment: accepted for publication in PASJ, 30 pages, 8 figures, 8 tables

Details

ISSN :
2053051X and 00046264
Volume :
63
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ea68cce6407e0a2ce98b03045cfacc6b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/pasj/63.1.287