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MASCARA-4 b/bRing-1b - A retrograde hot Jupiter around the bright A3V star HD 85628

Authors :
Dorval, P.
Talens, G. J. J.
Otten, G. P. P. L.
Brahm, R.
Jordán, A.
Vanzi, L.
Zapata, A.
Henry, T.
Paredes, L.
Jao, W. C.
James, H.
Hinojosa, R.
Bakos, G. A.
Csubry, Z.
Bhatti, W.
Suc, V.
Osip, D.
Mamajek, E. E.
Mellon, S. N.
Wyttenbach, A.
Stuik, R.
Kenworthy, M.
Bailey, J.
Ireland, M.
Crawford, S.
Lomberg, B.
Kuhn, R.
Snellen, I.
Source :
A&A 635, A60 (2020)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

In this paper, we aim to characterize a transiting planetary candidate in the southern skies found in the combined MASCARA and bRing data sets of HD 85628, an A3V star of V = 8.2 mag at a distance 172 pc, to confirm its planetary nature. The candidate was originally detected in data obtained jointly with the MASCARA and bRing instruments using a BLS search for transit events. Further photometry was taken by the 0.7 m CHAT, and radial velocity measurements with FIDEOS on the ESO 1.0 m Telescope. High resolution spectra during a transit were taken with CHIRON on the SMARTS 1.5 m telescope to target the Doppler shadow of the candidate. We confirm the existence of a hot Jupiter transiting the bright A3V star HD 85628, which we co-designate as MASCARA-4b and bRing-1b. It is in a 2.824 day orbit, with an estimated planet radius of $1.53 ^{0.07}_{0.04}$ $R_{\rm{Jup}}$ and an estimated planet mass of $3.1 \pm 0.9$ $M_{\rm{Jup}}$, putting it well within the planet mass regime.. The CHAT observations show a partial transit, reducing the probability that the transit was around a faint background star. The CHIRON observations show a clear Doppler shadow, implying that the transiting object is in a retrograde orbit with $|\lambda| = 247.5 \pm 1.6 $\textdegree. The planet orbits at at a distance of 0.047 $\pm$ 0.004 AU from the star and has a zero-albedo equilibrium temperature of 2100 $\pm$ 100 K. In addition, we find that HD 85628 has a previously unreported stellar companion star in the Gaia DR2 data demonstrating common proper motion and parallax at 4.3 arcsecond separation (projected separation $\sim$740 AU), and with absolute magnitude consistent with being a K/M dwarf.<br />Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, submitted to A&A

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
A&A 635, A60 (2020)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1904.02733
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201935611