HAT-P-18b and HAT-P-19b: Two Low-Density Saturn-Mass Planets Transiting Metal-Rich K Stars
J. D. Hartman, G. \'A. Bakos, B. Sato, G. Torres, R. W. Noyes, D. W., Latham, G. Kov\'acs, D. A. Fischer, A. W. Howard, J. A. Johnson, G. W. Marcy,, L. A. Buchhave, G. F\"uresz, G. Perumpilly, B. B\'eky, R. P. Stefanik, D. D., Sasselov, G. A. Esquerdo, M. Everett, Z. Csubry

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and characterization of two low-density Saturn-mass exoplanets orbiting metal-rich K stars, highlighting their similarities and differences with other known low-density planets and discussing implications for planetary formation theories.
Contribution
It presents the discovery and detailed analysis of two new low-density Saturn-mass planets around metal-rich stars, challenging existing correlations between host star metallicity and planetary core mass.
Findings
Both planets are consistent with hydrogen-helium dominated gas giants with negligible cores.
They are part of a group of low-density Saturn-mass planets with similar properties.
The host stars have super-solar metallicity, questioning previous correlations with planetary core mass.
Abstract
We report the discovery of two new transiting extrasolar planets. HAT-P-18b orbits the V=12.759 K2 dwarf star GSC 2594-00646, with a period P=5.508023+-0.000006 d, transit epoch Tc=2454715.02174+-0.00020 (BJD), and transit duration 0.1131+-0.0009 d. The host star has a mass of 0.77+-0.03 Msun, radius of 0.75+-0.04 Rsun, effective temperature 4803+-80 K, and metallicity [Fe/H]=+0.10+-0.08. The planetary companion has a mass of 0.197+-0.013 Mjup, and radius of 0.995+-0.052 Rjup yielding a mean density of 0.25+-0.04 g cm-3. HAT-P-19b orbits the V=12.901 K1 dwarf star GSC 2283-00589, with a period P=4.008778+-0.000006 d, transit epoch Tc=2455091.53417+-0.00034 (BJD), and transit duration 0.1182+-0.0014 d. The host star has a mass of 0.84+-0.04 Msun, radius of 0.82+-0.05 Rsun, effective temperature 4990+-130 K, and metallicity [Fe/H]=+0.23+-0.08. The planetary companion has a mass of…
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