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TIC 172900988: A Transiting Circumbinary Planet Detected in One Sector of TESS Data

Authors :
Kostov, Veselin B.
Powell, Brian P.
Orosz, Jerome A.
Welsh, William F.
Cochran, William
Collins, Karen A.
Endl, Michael
Hellier, Coel
Latham, David W.
MacQueen, Phillip
Pepper, Joshua
Quarles, Billy
Sairam, Lalitha
Torres, Guillermo
Wilson, Robert F.
Bergeron, Serge
Boyce, Pat
Bieryla, Allyson
Buchheim, Robert
Christiansen, Caleb Ben
Ciardi, David R.
Collins, Kevin I.
Conti, Dennis M.
Dixon, Scott
Guerra, Pere
Haghighipour, Nader
Herman, Jeffrey
Hintz, Eric G.
Howard, Ward S.
Jensen, Eric L. N.
Kielkopf, John F.
Kruse, Ethan
Law, Nicholas M.
Martin, David
Maxted, Pierre F. L.
Montet, Benjamin T.
Murgas, Felipe
Nelson, Matt
Olmschenk, Greg
Otero, Sebastian
Quimby, Robert
Richmond, Michael
Schwarz, Richard P.
Shporer, Avi
Stassun, Keivan G.
Stephens, Denise C.
Triaud, Amaury H. M. J.
Ulowetz, Joe
Walter, Bradley S.
Wiley, Edward
Wood, David
Yenawine, Mitchell
Agol, Eric
Barclay, Thomas
Beatty, Thomas G.
Boisse, Isabelle
Caldwell, Douglas A.
Christiansen, Jessie
Colon, Knicole D.
Deleuil, Magali
Doyle, Laurance
Fabrycky, Daniel
Fausnaugh, Michael
Furesz, Gabor
Gilbert, Emily A.
Hebrard, Guillaume
James, David J.
Jenkins, Jon
Kane, Stephen R.
Kidwell Jr., Richard C.
Kopparapu, Ravi
Li, Gongjie
Lissauer, Jack J.
Lund, Michael B.
Majewski, Steve
Mazeh, Tsevi
Quinn, Samuel N.
Quintana, Elisa
Ricker, George
Rodriguez, Joseph E.
Rowe, Jason
Santerne, Alexander
Schlieder, Joshua
Seager, Sara
Standing, Matthew R.
Stevens, Daniel J.
Ting, Eric B.
Vanderspek, Roland
Winn, Joshua N.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

We report the first discovery of a transiting circumbinary planet detected from a single sector of TESS data. During Sector 21, the planet TIC 172900988b transited the primary star and then 5 days later it transited the secondary star. The binary is itself eclipsing, with a period of P = 19.7 days and an eccentricity of e = 0.45. Archival data from ASAS-SN, Evryscope, KELT, and SuperWASP reveal a prominent apsidal motion of the binary orbit, caused by the dynamical interactions between the binary and the planet. A comprehensive photodynamical analysis of the TESS, archival and follow-up data yields stellar masses and radii of M1 = 1.2384 +/- 0.0007 MSun and R1 = 1.3827 +/- 0.0016 RSun for the primary and M2 = 1.2019 +/- 0.0007 MSun and R2 = 1.3124 +/- 0.0012 RSun for the secondary. The radius of the planet is R3 = 11.25 +/- 0.44 REarth (1.004 +/- 0.039 RJup). The planet's mass and orbital properties are not uniquely determined - there are six solutions with nearly equal likelihood. Specifically, we find that the planet's mass is in the range of 824 < M3 < 981 MEarth (2.65 < M3 < 3.09 MJup), its orbital period could be 188.8, 190.4, 194.0, 199.0, 200.4, or 204.1 days, and the eccentricity is between 0.02 and 0.09. At a V = 10.141 mag, the system is accessible for high-resolution spectroscopic observations, e.g. Rossiter-McLaughlin effect and transit spectroscopy.<br />Comment: 57 pages, 30 figures, 25 tables; Accepted AJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2105.08614
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ac223a