Parameters and Predictions for the Long-Period Transiting Planet HD 17156b
Jonathan Irwin, David Charbonneau, Philip Nutzman, William F. Welsh,, Abhijith Rajan, Marton Hidas, Timothy M. Brown, Timothy A. Lister, Donald, Davies, Gregory Laughlin, Jonathan Langton

TL;DR
This study provides detailed parameters and predictions for the long-period transiting exoplanet HD 17156b, including its size, orbit, and potential secondary eclipse, based on combined photometric and radial velocity data.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive analysis of HD 17156b's orbital and physical characteristics, including transit timing, inclination, and theoretical infrared emission models, enhancing understanding of such long-period exoplanets.
Findings
Planet radius estimated at 1.01 +/- 0.09 RJup
Orbital period determined as 21.21691 +/- 0.00071 days
No significant transit timing variations detected
Abstract
We report high-cadence time-series photometry of the recently-discovered transiting exoplanet system HD 17156, spanning the time of transit on UT 2007 October 1, from three separate observatories. We present a joint analysis of our photometry, previously published radial velocity measurements, and times of transit center for 3 additional events. Adopting the spectroscopically-determined values and uncertainties for the stellar mass and radius, we estimate a planet radius of Rp = 1.01 +/- 0.09 RJup and an inclination of i = 86.5 +1.1 -0.7 degrees. We find a time of transit center of Tc = 2454374.8338 +/- 0.0020 HJD and an orbital period of P = 21.21691 +/- 0.00071 days, and note that the 4 transits reported to date show no sign of timing variations that would indicate the presence of a third body in the system. Our results do not preclude the existence of a secondary eclipse, but imply…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
