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HAT-P-57b: A Short-Period Giant Planet Transiting A Bright Rapidly Rotating A8V Star Confirmed Via Doppler Tomography

Authors :
Hartman, J. D.
Bakos, G. Á.
Buchhave, L. A.
Torres, G.
Latham, D. W.
Kovács, G.
Bhatti, W.
Csubry, Z.
de Val-Borro, M.
Penev, K.
Huang, C. X.
Béky, B.
Bieryla, A.
Quinn, S. N.
Howard, A. W.
Marcy, G. W.
Johnson, J. A.
Isaacson, H.
Fischer, D. A.
Noyes, R. W.
Falco, E.
Esquerdo, G. A.
Knox, R. P.
Hinz, P.
Lázár, J.
Papp, I.
Sári, P.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

We present the discovery of HAT-P-57b, a P = 2.4653 day transiting planet around a V = 10.465 +- 0.029 mag, Teff = 7500 +- 250 K main sequence A8V star with a projected rotation velocity of v sin i = 102.1 +- 1.3 km s^-1. We measure the radius of the planet to be R = 1.413 +- 0.054 R_J and, based on RV observations, place a 95% confidence upper limit on its mass of M < 1.85 M_J . Based on theoretical stellar evolution models, the host star has a mass and radius of 1.47 +- 0.12 M_sun, and 1.500 +- 0.050 R_sun, respectively. Spectroscopic observations made with Keck-I/HIRES during a partial transit event show the Doppler shadow of HAT-P-57b moving across the average spectral line profile of HAT-P- 57, confirming the object as a planetary system. We use these observations, together with analytic formulae that we derive for the line profile distortions, to determine the projected angle between the spin axis of HAT-P-57 and the orbital axis of HAT-P-57b. The data permit two possible solutions, with -16.7 deg < lambda < 3.3 deg or 27.6 deg < lambda < 57.4 deg at 95% confidence, and with relative probabilities for the two modes of 26% and 74%, respectively. Adaptive optics imaging with MMT/Clio2 reveals an object located 2.7" from HAT-P-57 consisting of two point sources separated in turn from each other by 0.22". The H and L -band magnitudes of the companion stars are consistent with their being physically associated with HAT-P-57, in which case they are stars of mass 0.61 +- 0.10 M_sun and 0.53 +- 0.08 M_sun. HAT-P-57 is the most rapidly rotating star, and only the fourth main sequence A star, known to host a transiting planet.<br />Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures, 5 tables, accepted for publication in AJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1510.08839
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-6256/150/6/197