Kepler-424 b: A "Lonely" Hot Jupiter That Found A Companion
Michael Endl, Douglas A. Caldwell, Thomas Barclay, Daniel Huber,, Howard Isaacson, Lars A. Buchhave, Erik Brugamyer, Paul Robertson, William D., Cochran, Phillip J. MacQueen, Mathieu Havel, Phillip Lucas, Steve B. Howell,, Debra Fischer, Elisa Quintana, David R. Ciardi

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a two-planet system with a hot Jupiter and a distant companion, challenging the idea that hot Jupiters are usually alone, and provides detailed orbital and mass measurements.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed characterization of a hot Jupiter with a companion, using radial velocity data, and compares these systems to planetary evolution models.
Findings
Kepler-424b is a hot Jupiter with a 3.31-day orbit.
Kepler-424c is a more massive outer planet with a 223-day eccentric orbit.
The system contains hot Jupiters with significant heavy element content.
Abstract
Hot Jupiter systems provide unique observational constraints for migration models in multiple systems and binaries. We report on the discovery of the Kepler-424 (KOI-214) two-planet system, which consists of a transiting hot Jupiter (Kepler-424b) in a 3.31-d orbit accompanied by a more massive outer companion in an eccentric (e=0.3) 223-d orbit. The outer giant planet, Kepler-424c, is not detected to transit the host star. The masses of both planets and the orbital parameters for the second planet were determined using precise radial velocity (RV) measurements from the Hobby-Eberly Telescope (HET) and its High Resolution Spectrograph (HRS). In stark contrast to smaller planets, hot Jupiters are predominantly found to be lacking any nearby additional planets, the appear to be "lonely" (e.g. Steffen et al.~2012). This might be a consequence of a highly dynamical past of these systems. The…
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