Kepler-77b: a very low albedo, Saturn-mass transiting planet around a metal-rich solar-like star
D. Gandolfi, H. Parviainen, M. Fridlund, A. P. Hatzes, H. J. Deeg, A., Frasca, A. F. Lanza, P. G. Prada Moroni, E. Tognelli, A. McQuillan, S., Aigrain, R. Alonso, V. Antoci, J. Cabrera, L. Carone, Sz. Csizmadia, A. A., Djupvik, E. W. Guenther, J. Jessen-Hansen, A. Ofir

TL;DR
Kepler-77b is a Saturn-mass exoplanet with extremely low albedo, orbiting a metal-rich solar-like star, discovered through combined Kepler photometry and spectroscopy, with no detectable planetary occultation or transit-timing variations.
Contribution
This study presents the discovery and detailed characterization of Kepler-77b, highlighting its very low albedo and the use of Bayesian analysis with MCMC to derive system parameters.
Findings
Kepler-77b has a mass of 0.430 Mjup and radius of 0.960 Rjup.
The planet's geometric and Bond albedos are less than 0.087 and 0.058, respectively.
No additional transits or transit-timing variations detected.
Abstract
We report the discovery of Kepler-77b (alias KOI-127.01), a Saturn-mass transiting planet in a 3.6-day orbit around a metal-rich solar-like star. We combined the publicly available Kepler photometry (quarters 1-13) with high-resolution spectroscopy from the Sandiford@McDonald and FIES@NOT spectrographs. We derived the system parameters via a simultaneous joint fit to the photometric and radial velocity measurements. Our analysis is based on the Bayesian approach and is carried out by sampling the parameter posterior distributions using a Markov chain Monte Carlo simulation. Kepler-77b is a moderately inflated planet with a mass of Mp=0.430+/-0.032 Mjup, a radius of Rp=0.960+/-0.016 Rjup, and a bulk density of 0.603+/-0.055 g/cm^3. It orbits a slowly rotating (P=36+/-6 days) G5V star with M*=0.95+/-0.04 Msun, R*=0.99+/-0.02 Rsun, Teff=5520+/-60 K, [M/H]=0.20+/-0.05, that has an age of…
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