Bibcode
Alsubai, Khalid; Tsvetanov, Zlatan I.; Latham, David W.; Bieryla, Allyson; Pyrzas, Stylianos; Mislis, Dimitris; Esquerdo, Gilbert A.; Esamdin, Ali; Liu, Jinzhong; Ma, Lu; Bretton, Marc; Pallé, E.; Murgas, F.; Vilchez, Nicolas P. E.; Morton, Timothy D.; Parviainien, H.; Montañes-Rodriguez, P.; Narita, Norio; Fukui, Akihiko; Kusakabe, Nobuhiko; Tamura, Motohide
Bibliographical reference
The Astronomical Journal, Volume 157, Issue 2, article id. 74, 9 pp. (2019).
Advertised on:
2
2019
Citations
4
Refereed citations
2
Description
We present the discovery of Qatar-7b—a very hot and inflated giant
gas planet orbiting close to its parent star. The host star is a
relatively massive main-sequence F-star with mass and radius
{M}\star =1.41+/- 0.03 {M}ȯ and
{R}\star =1.56+/- 0.02 {R}ȯ , respectively,
at a distance d = 726 ± 26 pc, and an estimated age ∼1 Gyr.
With its orbital period of P = 2.032 days, the planet is located less
than five stellar radii from its host star and is heated to a high
temperature T eq ≈ 2100 K. From a global solution to the
available photometric and radial velocity observations, we calculate the
mass and radius of the planet to be {M}{{P}} = 1.88 ±
0.25 {M}{{J}} and {R}{{P}} = 1.70 ± 0.03
{R}{{J}}, respectively. The planet radius and equilibrium
temperature put Qatar-7b in the top 6% of the hottest and largest known
exoplanets. With its large radius and high temperature, Qatar-7b is a
valuable addition to the short list of targets that offer the best
opportunity for studying their atmospheres through transmission
spectroscopy.
Related projects
Exoplanets and Astrobiology
The search for life in the universe has been driven by recent discoveries of planets around other stars (known as exoplanets), becoming one of the most active fields in modern astrophysics. The growing number of new exoplanets discovered in recent years and the recent advance on the study of their atmospheres are not only providing new valuable
Enric
Pallé Bago