UP - logo
E-viri
Celotno besedilo
Recenzirano Odprti dostop
  • TOI-858 B b: A hot Jupiter ...
    Hagelberg, J.; Nielsen, L. D.; Attia, O.; Bourrier, V.; Pearce, L.; Venturini, J.; Winn, J. N.; Bouchy, F.; Bouma, L. G.; Briceño, C.; Collins, K. A.; Davis, A. B.; Eastman, J. D.; Evans, P.; Falk, B.; Grieves, N.; Guerrero, N. M.; Hellier, C.; Jones, M. I.; Latham, D. W.; Law, N.; Mann, A. W.; Marmier, M.; Ottoni, G.; Radford, D. J.; Restori, N.; Rudat, A.; Dos Santos, L.; Seager, S.; Stassun, K.; Stockdale, C.; Udry, S.; Wang, S.; Ziegler, C.

    Astronomy & astrophysics, 11/2023, Letnik: 679
    Journal Article

    We report the discovery of a hot Jupiter on a 3.28-day orbit around a 1.08 M ⊙ G0 star that is the secondary component in a loose binary system. Based on follow-up radial velocity observations of TOI-858 B with CORALIE on the Swiss 1.2 m telescope and CHIRON on the 1.5 m telescope at the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory (CTIO), we measured the planet mass to be 1.10 −0.07 +0.08 M J . Two transits were further observed with CORALIE to determine the alignment of TOI-858 B b with respect to its host star. Analysis of the Rossiter-McLaughlin signal from the planet shows that the sky-projected obliquity is λ = 99.3 −3.7 +3.8° . Numerical simulations show that the neighbour star TOI-858 A is too distant to have trapped the planet in a Kozai–Lidov resonance, suggesting a different dynamical evolution or a primordial origin to explain this misalignment. The 1.15 M ⊙ primary F9 star of the system (TYC 8501-01597-1, at ρ ~11″) was also observed with CORALIE in order to provide upper limits for the presence of aplanetary companion orbiting that star.