Wednesday, October 17, 2012

1210.4257 (M. Gillon et al.)

WASP-64b and WASP-72b: two new transiting highly irradiated giant planets    [PDF]

M. Gillon, D. R. Anderson, A. Collier-Cameron, A. P. Doyle, A. Fumel, C. Hellier, E. Jehin, M. Lendl, P. F. L. Maxted, J. Montalban, F. Pepe, D. Pollacco, D. Queloz, D. Segransan, A. M. S. Smith, B. Smalley, J. Southworth, A. H. M. J. Triaud, S. Udry, R. G. West
We report the discovery by the WASP transit survey of two new highly irradiated giant planets transiting moderately bright stars. WASP-64b is slightly more massive (1.271+-0.068 M_Jup) and larger (1.271+-0.039 R_Jup) than Jupiter, and is in very-short (a=0.02648+-0.00024 AU) circular orbit around a V=12.3 G7-type dwarf (1.004+-0.028 M_Sun, 1.058+-0.025 R_Sun, Teff=5500+-150 K). Its size is typical of hot Jupiters with similar masses. WASP-72b has also a mass a bit larger than Jupiter's (1.410-0.050+0.045 M_Jup) and orbits very close (0.03655-0.00032+0.00039 AU) to a slightly evolved V=9.6 F7-type star (1.327-0.035+0.043 M_Sun, 1.71-0.09+0.16 R_Sun, Teff=6250+-100 K). Despite its extreme irradiation (about 4 10^9 erg/s/cm^2), WASP-72b has a size consistent with Jupiter's (1.01-0.08+0.12 R_Jup) that makes it a possible outlier among the hot Jupiters of similar masses, suggesting a significant enrichment in heavy elements.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1210.4257

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