Transiting exoplanets from the CoRoT space mission XXV. CoRoT-27b: a massive and dense planet on a short-period orbit
H. Parviainen, D. Gandolfi, M. Deleuil, C. Moutou, H.J. Deeg, S., Ferraz-Mello, B. Samuel, Sz. Csizmadia, T. Pasternacki, G. Wuchterl, M., Havel, M. Fridlund, R. Angus, B. Tingley, S. Grziwa, J. Korth, S. Aigrain,, J.M. Almenara, R. Alonso, A. Baglin, S.C.C. Barros

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed characterization of CoRoT-27b, a massive, dense exoplanet with a short orbital period, using combined photometric and spectroscopic data analyzed through Bayesian methods.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed Bayesian analysis of CoRoT-27b, including noise modeling and constraints on orbital eccentricity and heavy element content.
Findings
CoRoT-27b has a mass of approximately 10.4 Jupiter masses.
The planet's density is about 12.6 g/cm³, indicating a dense composition.
No secondary eclipses were detected due to high noise levels.
Abstract
We report the discovery of a massive and dense transiting planet CoRoT-27b on a 3.58 day orbit around a 4.2 Gyr-old G2 star. The planet candidate was identified from the CoRoT photometry, and was confirmed as a planet with ground-based spectroscopy. The confirmation of the planet candidate is based on radial velocity observations combined with imaging to rule out blends. The characterisation of the planet and its host star is carried out using a Bayesian approach where all the data (CoRoT photometry, radial velocities, and spectroscopic characterisation of the star) are used jointly. The Bayesian analysis includes a study whether the assumption of white normally distributed noise holds for the CoRoT photometry, and whether the use of a non-normal noise distribution offers advantages in parameter estimation and model selection. CoRoT-27b has a mass of …
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
