HAT-P-7b: An Extremely Hot Massive Planet Transiting a Bright Star in the Kepler Field
A. Pal (1,2), G. A. Bakos (1,3), G. Torres (1), R. W. Noyes (1), D. W., Latham (1), Geza Kovacs (4), G. W. Marcy (5), D. A. Fischer (6), R. P. Butler, (7), D. D. Sasselov (1), B. Sipocz (2,1), G. A. Esquerdo (1), Gabor Kovacs, (1), R. Stefanik (1), J. Lazar (8), I. Papp (8)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and characterization of HAT-P-7b, an extremely hot, massive exoplanet transiting a bright star, with potential for detailed atmospheric and asteroseismic studies due to its favorable observational properties.
Contribution
The paper presents the discovery of HAT-P-7b, a hot giant planet with detailed measurements of its physical and orbital parameters, and discusses its significance for atmospheric modeling and follow-up observations.
Findings
HAT-P-7b is a hot giant planet with a mass of 1.78 MJup and radius of 1.36 RJup.
The host star is a bright, slightly evolved F6 star with high metallicity.
The planet's high irradiance makes it suitable for secondary eclipse measurements and atmospheric studies.
Abstract
We report on the latest discovery of the HATNet project; a very hot giant planet orbiting a bright (V = 10.5) star with a small semi-major axis of a = 0.0377 +/- 0.0005 AU. Ephemeris for the system is P = 2.2047299 +/- 0.0000040 days, mid-transit time E = 2,453,790.2593 +/- 0.0010 (BJD). Based on the available spectroscopic data on the host star and photometry of the system, the planet has a mass of Mp = 1.78+/-^{0.08}_{0.05} MJup and radius of Rp = 1.36+/-^{0.20}_{0.09} RJup. The parent star is a slightly evolved F6 star with M = 1.47+/-^{0.08}_{-0.05} Msun,R = 1.84+/-^{0.23}_{0.11} Rsun, Teff = 6350 +/- 80 K, and metallicity [Fe/H] = +0.26 +/- 0.08. The relatively hot and large host star, combined with the close orbit of the planet, yield a very high planetary irradiance of (4.71+/-^{1.44}_{0.05}) 10^9 erg cm^{-2}s^{-1}, which places the planet near the top of the pM class of…
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