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WASP-23b: a transiting hot Jupiter around a K dwarf and its Rossiter-McLaughlin effect

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arxiv 1103.2603 v1 pith:7YYC6PU4 submitted 2011-03-14 astro-ph.EP astro-ph.SR

WASP-23b: a transiting hot Jupiter around a K dwarf and its Rossiter-McLaughlin effect

classification astro-ph.EP astro-ph.SR
keywords telescopeeffectplanetfindgivespriorsrossiter-mclaughlinrotation
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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We report the discovery of a new transiting planet in the Southern Hemisphere. It has been found by the WASP-south transit survey and confirmed photometrically and spectroscopically by the 1.2m Swiss Euler telescope, LCOGT 2m Faulkes South Telescope, the 60 cm TRAPPIST telescope and the ESO 3.6m telescope. The orbital period of the planet is 2.94 days. We find it is a gas giant with a mass of 0.88 \pm 0.10 Mj and a radius estimated at 0.96 \pm 0.05 Rj . We have also obtained spectra during transit with the HARPS spectrograph and detect the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect despite its small amplitude. Because of the low signal to noise of the effect and of a small impact parameter we cannot place a constraint on the projected spin-orbit angle. We find two confiicting values for the stellar rotation. Our determination, via spectral line broadening gives v sin I = 2.2 \pm 0.3 km/s, while another method, based on the activity level using the index log R'HK, gives an equatorial rotation velocity of only v = 1.35 \pm 0.20 km/s. Using these as priors in our analysis, the planet could either be misaligned or aligned. This should send strong warnings regarding the use of such priors. There is no evidence for eccentricity nor of any radial velocity drift with time.

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  1. ASTEP confirmation of a pair of long-period Jupiter-sized planets with extremely low densities transiting TOI-791

    astro-ph.EP 2026-06 unverdicted novelty 5.0

    Two extremely low-density Jupiter-sized planets on long-period orbits around TOI-791 were confirmed via ground-based photometry and TTV-derived masses.