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KELT-9 as an eclipsing double-lined spectroscopic binary: a unique and self-consistent solution to the system

Authors :
Asnodkar, Anusha Pai
Wang, Ji
Gaudi, B. Scott
Cauley, P. Wilson
Eastman, Jason D.
Ilyin, Ilya
Strassmeier, Klaus
Beatty, Thomas
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Transiting hot Jupiters present a unique opportunity to measure absolute planetary masses due to the magnitude of their radial velocity signals and known orbital inclination. Measuring planet mass is critical to understanding atmospheric dynamics and escape under extreme stellar irradiation. Here, we present the ultra-hot Jupiter system, KELT-9, as a double-lined spectroscopic binary. This allows us to directly and empirically constrain the mass of the star and its planetary companion, without reference to any theoretical stellar evolutionary models or empirical stellar scaling relations. Using data from the PEPSI, HARPS-N, and TRES spectrographs across multiple epochs, we apply least-squares deconvolution to measure out-of-transit stellar radial velocities. With the PEPSI and HARPS-N datasets, we measure in-transit planet radial velocities using transmission spectroscopy. By fitting the circular orbital solution that captures these Keplerian motions, we recover a planetary dynamical mass of 2.17 $\pm$ 0.56 $\mathrm{M_J}$ and stellar dynamical mass of 2.11 $\pm$ 0.78 $\mathrm{M_\odot}$, both of which agree with the discovery paper. Furthermore, we argue that this system, as well as systems like it, are highly overconstrained, providing multiple independent avenues for empirically cross-validating model-independent solutions to the system parameters. We also discuss the implications of this revised mass for studies of atmospheric escape.<br />Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures, published in AJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2110.15275
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ac32c7