HAT-P-11b: A Super-Neptune Planet Transiting a Bright K Star in the Kepler Field
G. \'A. Bakos (1,2), G. Torres (1), A. P\'al (1,4), J. Hartman (1),, G\'eza Kov\'acs (3), R. W. Noyes (1), D. W. Latham (1), D. D. Sasselov (1),, B. Sip\H{o}cz (1,4), G. A. Esquerdo (1), D. A. Fischer (5), J. A. Johnson, (6), G. W. Marcy (7), R. P. Butler (8), H. Isaacson (5)

TL;DR
HAT-P-11b is the smallest ground-discovered transiting exoplanet, a hot Neptune orbiting a bright K star, with detailed analysis confirming its planetary nature and orbital parameters, including eccentricity.
Contribution
First ground-based discovery of a hot Neptune transiting a bright star, with comprehensive analysis ruling out blending scenarios.
Findings
HAT-P-11b has a radius of 4.73 Rearth and mass of 25.8 Mearth.
The planet orbits with an eccentricity of 0.198.
The host star is a bright K4 dwarf with well-characterized parameters.
Abstract
We report on the discovery of HAT-P-11b, the smallest radius transiting extrasolar planet (TEP) discovered from the ground, and the first hot Neptune discovered to date by transit searches. HAT-P-11b orbits the bright (V=9.587) and metal rich ([Fe=H] = +0.31 +/- 0.05) K4 dwarf star GSC 03561-02092 with P = 4.8878162 +/- 0.0000071 days and produces a transit signal with depth of 4.2 mmag. We present a global analysis of the available photometric and radial-velocity data that result in stellar and planetary parameters, with simultaneous treatment of systematic variations. The planet, like its near-twin GJ 436b, is somewhat larger than Neptune (17Mearth, 3.8Rearth) both in mass Mp = 0.081 +/- 0.009 MJ (25.8 +/- 2.9 Mearth) and radius Rp = 0.422 +/- 0.014 RJ (4.73 +/- 0.16 Rearth). HAT-P-11b orbits in an eccentric orbit with e = 0.198 +/- 0.046 and omega = 355.2 +/- 17.3, causing a reflex…
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