Bibcode
Birkby, J. L.; Cappetta, M.; Cruz, P.; Koppenhoefer, J.; Ivanyuk, O.; Mustill, A. J.; Hodgkin, S. T.; Pinfield, D. J.; Sipőcz, B.; Kovács, G.; Saglia, R.; Pavlenko, Y.; Barrado, D.; Bayo, A.; Campbell, D.; Catalan, S.; Fossati, L.; Gálvez-Ortiz, M.-C.; Kenworthy, M.; Lillo-Box, J.; Martín, E. L.; Mislis, D.; de Mooij, E. J. W.; Nefs, S. V.; Snellen, I. A. G.; Stoev, H.; Zendejas, J.; Burgo, C. del; Barnes, J.; Goulding, N.; Haswell, C. A.; Kuznetsov, M.; Lodieu, N.; Murgas, F.; Palle, E.; Solano, E.; Steele, P.; Tata, R.
Referencia bibliográfica
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 440, Issue 2, p.1470-1489
Fecha de publicación:
3
2014
Número de citas
52
Número de citas referidas
47
Descripción
We report the discovery of WTS-2 b, an unusually close-in 1.02-d hot
Jupiter (MP = 1.12MJ, RP =
1.30RJ) orbiting a K2V star, which has a possible
gravitationally bound M-dwarf companion at 0.6 arcsec separation
contributing ˜20 per cent of the total flux in the observed J-band
light curve. The planet is only 1.5 times the separation from its host
star at which it would be destroyed by Roche lobe overflow, and has a
predicted remaining lifetime of just ˜40 Myr, assuming a tidal
dissipation quality factor of Q_{*}^'}=106. Q_{*}^'} is a key
factor in determining how frictional processes within a host star affect
the orbital evolution of its companion giant planets, but it is
currently poorly constrained by observations. We calculate that the
orbital decay of WTS-2 b would correspond to a shift in its transit
arrival time of Tshift ˜ 17 s after 15 yr assuming
Q_{*}^'}=106. A shift less than this would place a direct
observational constraint on the lower limit of Q_{*}^'} in this system.
We also report a correction to the previously published expected
Tshift for WASP-18 b, finding that Tshift = 356 s
after 10 yr for Q_{*}^'}=106, which is much larger than the
estimated 28 s quoted in WASP-18 b discovery paper. We attempted to
constrain Q_{*}^'} via a study of the entire population of known
transiting hot Jupiters, but our results were inconclusive, requiring a
more detailed treatment of transit survey sensitivities at long periods.
We conclude that the most informative and straightforward constraints on
Q_{*}^'} will be obtained by direct observational measurements of the
shift in transit arrival times in individual hot Jupiter systems. We
show that this is achievable across the mass spectrum of exoplanet host
stars within a decade, and will directly probe the effects of stellar
interior structure on tidal dissipation.
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