HAT-P-44b, HAT-P-45b, and HAT-P-46b: Three Transiting Hot Jupiters in Possible Multi-Planet Systems
J. D. Hartman, G. \'A. Bakos, G. Torres, G. Kov\'acs, J. A. Johnson,, A. W. Howard, G. W. Marcy, D. W. Latham, A. Bieryla, L. A. Buchhave, W., Bhatti, B. B\'eky, Z. Csubry, K. Penev, M. de Val-Borro, R. W. Noyes, D. A., Fischer, G. A. Esquerdo, M. Everett, T. Szklen\'ar, G. Zhou

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of three transiting hot Jupiters with potential additional planets, highlighting the importance of further radial velocity monitoring to understand their system architectures and formation histories.
Contribution
It presents the discovery and initial characterization of three hot Jupiter systems, including evidence for possible multi-planet configurations, using data from the HATNet survey.
Findings
Three new transiting hot Jupiters with well-measured properties.
Evidence suggests possible additional planetary companions in two systems.
Inner planets are robustly characterized despite uncertainties in outer planet models.
Abstract
We report the discovery by the HATNet survey of three new transiting extrasolar planets orbiting moderately bright (V=13.2, 12.8 and 11.9) stars. The planets have orbital periods of 4.3012, 3.1290, and 4.4631 days, masses of 0.39, 0.89, and 0.49 Mjup, and radii of 1.28, 1.43, and 1.28 Rjup. The stellar hosts have masses of 0.94, 1.26, and 1.28 Msun. Each system shows significant systematic variations in its residual radial velocities indicating the possible presence of additional components. Based on its Bayesian evidence, the preferred model for HAT-P-44 consists of two planets, including the transiting component, with the outer planet having a period of 220 d and a minimum mass of 1.6 Mjup. Due to aliasing we cannot rule out an alternative solution for the outer planet having a period of 438 d and a minimum mass of 3.7 Mjup. For HAT-P-45 at present there is not enough data to justify…
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Taxonomy
TopicsScientific Research and Discoveries · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
