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HATS-39b, HATS-40b, HATS-41b, and HATS-42b: Three Inflated Hot Jupiters and a Super-Jupiter Transiting F Stars

Authors :
Bento, J.
Hartman, J. D.
Bakos, G. A.
Bhatti, W.
Csubry, Z.
Penev, K.
Bayliss, D.
de Val-Borro, M.
Zhou, G.
Brahm, R.
Espinoza, N.
Rabus, M.
Jordan, A.
Suc, V.
Ciceri, S.
Sarkis, P.
Henning, T.
Mancini, L.
Tinney, C. G.
Wright, D. J.
Durkan, S.
Tan, T. G.
Lazar, J.
Papp, I.
Sari, P.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

We report the discovery of four transiting hot Jupiters from the HATSouth survey: HATS-39b, HATS-40b, HATS41b and HATS-42b. These discoveries add to the growing number of transiting planets orbiting moderately bright (12.5 < V < 13.7) F dwarf stars on short (2-5 day) periods. The planets have similar radii, ranging from 1.33(+0.29/-0.20) R_J for HATS-41b to 1.58(+0.16/-0.12) R_J for HATS-40b. Their masses and bulk densities, however, span more than an order of magnitude. HATS-39b has a mass of 0.63 +/- 0.13 M_J, and an inflated radius of 1.57 +/- 0.12 R_J, making it a good target for future transmission spectroscopic studies. HATS-41b is a very massive 9.7 +/- 1.6 M_J planet and one of only a few hot Jupiters found to date with a mass over 5 M_J. This planet orbits the highest metallicity star ([Fe/H] = 0.470 +/- 0.010) known to host a transiting planet and is also likely on an eccentric orbit. The high mass, coupled with a relatively young age (1.34 +0.31/-0.51 Gyr) for the host star, are factors that may explain why this planet's orbit has not yet circularised.<br />Comment: 24 pages,accepted in MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1804.01623
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/sty726