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TOI-257b (HD 19916b): A Warm sub-Saturn Orbiting an Evolved F-type Star

Authors :
Addison, Brett C.
Wright, Duncan J.
Nicholson, Belinda A.
Cale, Bryson
Mocnik, Teo
Huber, Daniel
Plavchan, Peter
Wittenmyer, Robert A.
Vanderburg, Andrew
Chaplin, William J.
Chontos, Ashley
Clark, Jake T.
Eastman, Jason D.
Ziegler, Carl
Brahm, Rafael
Carter, Bradley D.
Clerte, Mathieu
Espinoza, Néstor
Horner, Jonathan
Bentley, John
Jordán, Andrés
Kane, Stephen R.
Kielkopf, John F.
Laychock, Emilie
Mengel, Matthew W.
Okumura, Jack
Stassun, Keivan G.
Bedding, Timothy R.
Bowler, Brendan P.
Burnelis, Andrius
Blanco-Cuaresma, Sergi
Collins, Michaela
Crossfield, Ian
Davis, Allen B.
Evensberget, Dag
Heitzmann, Alexis
Howell, Steve B.
Law, Nicholas
Mann, Andrew W.
Marsden, Stephen C.
Matson, Rachel A.
O'Connor, James
Shporer, Avi
Stevens, Catherine
Tinney, C. G.
Tylor, Christopher
Wang, Songhu
Zhang, Hui
Henning, Thomas
Kossakowski, Diana
Ricker, George
Sarkis, Paula
Schlecker, Martin
Torres, Pascal
Vanderspek, Roland
Latham, David W.
Seager, Sara
Winn, Joshua N.
Jenkins, Jon M.
Mireles, Ismael
Rowden, Pam
Pepper, Joshua
Daylan, Tansu
Schlieder, Joshua E.
Collins, Karen A.
Collins, Kevin I.
Tan, Thiam-Guan
Ball, Warrick H.
Basu, Sarbani
Buzasi, Derek L.
Campante, Tiago L.
Corsaro, Enrico
González-Cuesta, Lucía
Davies, Guy R.
de Almeida, Leandro
Nascimento, Jr., Jose-Dias do
a, Rafael A. Garcí
Guo, Zhao
Handberg, Rasmus
Hekker, Saskia
Hey, Daniel R.
Kallinger, Thomas
Kawaler, Steven D.
Kayhan, Cenk
Kuszlewicz, James S.
Lund, Mikkel N.
Lyttle, Alexander
Mathur, Savita
Miglio, Andrea
Mosser, Benoit
Nielsen, Martin B.
Serenelli, Aldo M.
Aguirre, Victor Silva
Themeßl, Nathalie
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

We report the discovery of a warm sub-Saturn, TOI-257b (HD 19916b), based on data from NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). The transit signal was detected by TESS and confirmed to be of planetary origin based on radial velocity observations. An analysis of the TESS photometry, the Minerva-Australis, FEROS, and HARPS radial velocities, and the asteroseismic data of the stellar oscillations reveals that TOI-257b has a mass of $M_P=0.138\pm0.023$\,$\rm{M_J}$ ($43.9\pm7.3$\,$M_{\rm \oplus}$), a radius of $R_P=0.639\pm0.013$\,$\rm{R_J}$ ($7.16\pm0.15$\,$R_{\rm \oplus}$), bulk density of $0.65^{+0.12}_{-0.11}$ (cgs), and period $18.38818^{+0.00085}_{-0.00084}$\,$\rm{days}$. TOI-257b orbits a bright ($\mathrm{V}=7.612$\,mag) somewhat evolved late F-type star with $M_*=1.390\pm0.046$\,$\rm{M_{\odot}}$, $R_*=1.888\pm0.033$\,$\rm{R_{\odot}}$, $T_{\rm eff}=6075\pm90$\,$\rm{K}$, and $v\sin{i}=11.3\pm0.5$\,km\,s$^{-1}$. Additionally, we find hints for a second non-transiting sub-Saturn mass planet on a $\sim71$\,day orbit using the radial velocity data. This system joins the ranks of a small number of exoplanet host stars ($\sim100$) that have been characterized with asteroseismology. Warm sub-Saturns are rare in the known sample of exoplanets, and thus the discovery of TOI-257b is important in the context of future work studying the formation and migration history of similar planetary systems.<br />Comment: 24 pages, 20 figures, 6 tables. Published in MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2001.07345
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/staa3960