TIC 172900988: A transiting circumbinary planet detected in one sector of TESS data
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Department of Astronomy, University of ArizonaSteward Observatory, University of Arizona
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2021
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American Astronomical SocietyCitation
Kostov, V. B., Powell, B. P., Orosz, J. A., Welsh, W. F., Cochran, W., Collins, K. A., Endl, M., Hellier, C., Latham, D. W., MacQueen, P., Pepper, J., Quarles, B., Sairam, L., Torres, G., Wilson, R. F., Bergeron, S., Boyce, P., Bieryla, A., Buchheim, R., … Winn, J. N. (2021). TIC 172900988: A transiting circumbinary planet detected in one sector of TESS data. Astronomical Journal.Journal
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This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu.Abstract
We report the first discovery of a transiting circumbinary planet detected from a single sector of Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) data. During Sector 21, the planet TIC 172900988b transited the primary star and then five days later it transited the secondary star. The binary is itself eclipsing, with a period P ≈ 19.7 days and an eccentricity 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 Me and R1 = 1.3827 ± 0.0016 Re for the primary and M2 = 1.2019 ± 0.0007 Me and R2 = 1.3124 ± 0.0012 Re for the secondary. The radius of the planet is R3 = 11.25 ± 0.44 R (1.004 ± 0.039RJup). 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 M (2.65 M3 3.09MJup), 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 V = 10.141 mag, the system is accessible for high-resolution spectroscopic observations, e.g., the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect and transit spectroscopy. © 2021. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.Note
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0004-6256Version
Final published versionae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.3847/1538-3881/ac223a