Back to Search Start Over

TOI 564 b and TOI 905 b: Grazing and Fully Transiting Hot Jupiters Discovered by TESS

Authors :
Davis, Allen B.
Wang, Songhu
Jones, Matias
Eastman, Jason D.
Günther, Maximilian N.
Stassun, Keivan G.
Addison, Brett C.
Collins, Karen A.
Quinn, Samuel N.
Latham, David W.
Trifonov, Trifon
Shahaf, Sahar
Mazeh, Tsevi
Kane, Stephen R.
Wang, Xian-Yu
Tan, Thiam-Guan
Tokovinin, Andrei
Ziegler, Carl
Tronsgaard, René
Millholland, Sarah
Cruz, Bryndis
Berlind, Perry
Calkins, Michael L.
Esquerdo, Gilbert A.
Collins, Kevin I.
Conti, Dennis M.
Evans, Phil
Lewin, Pablo
Radford, Don J.
Paredes, Leonardo A.
Henry, Todd J.
James, Hodari-Sadiki
Law, Nicholas M.
Mann, Andrew W.
Briceño, César
Ricker, George R.
Vanderspek, Roland
Seager, Sara
Winn, Joshua N.
Jenkins, Jon M.
Krishnamurthy, Akshata
Batalha, Natalie M.
Burt, Jennifer
Colón, Knicole D.
Dynes, Scott
Caldwell, Douglas A.
Morris, Robert
Henze, Christopher E.
Fischer, Debra A.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We report the discovery and confirmation of two new hot Jupiters discovered by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS): TOI 564 b and TOI 905 b. The transits of these two planets were initially observed by TESS with orbital periods of 1.651 d and 3.739 d, respectively. We conducted follow-up observations of each system from the ground, including photometry in multiple filters, speckle interferometry, and radial velocity measurements. For TOI 564 b, our global fitting revealed a classical hot Jupiter with a mass of $1.463^{+0.10}_{-0.096}\ M_J$ and a radius of $1.02^{+0.71}_{-0.29}\ R_J$. TOI 905 b is a classical hot Jupiter as well, with a mass of $0.667^{+0.042}_{-0.041}\ M_J$ and radius of $1.171^{+0.053}_{-0.051}\ R_J$. Both planets orbit Sun-like, moderately bright, mid-G dwarf stars with V ~ 11. While TOI 905 b fully transits its star, we found that TOI 564 b has a very high transit impact parameter of $0.994^{+0.083}_{-0.049}$, making it one of only ~20 known systems to exhibit a grazing transit and one of the brightest host stars among them. TOI 564 b is therefore one of the most attractive systems to search for additional non-transiting, smaller planets by exploiting the sensitivity of grazing transits to small changes in inclination and transit duration over the time scale of several years.<br />Comment: 21 pages and 10 figures. Submitted to AJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1912.10186
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/aba49d