Kepler-432: a red giant interacting with one of its two long period giant planets
Samuel N. Quinn, Timothy R. White, David W. Latham, William J., Chaplin, Rasmus Handberg, Daniel Huber, David M. Kipping, Matthew J. Payne,, Chen Jiang, Victor Silva Aguirre, Dennis Stello, David H. Sliski, David R., Ciardi, Lars A. Buchhave, Timothy R. Bedding, Guy R. Davies

TL;DR
Kepler-432 is a system with a massive, eccentric giant planet transiting an evolved star, accompanied by a non-transiting outer planet and a bound M dwarf, providing insights into planet formation and star-planet interactions.
Contribution
This study presents the discovery and detailed characterization of Kepler-432b and its companions, including precise measurements of planetary and stellar properties, and explores star-planet interaction effects.
Findings
Kepler-432b is a super-Jupiter with high eccentricity.
Detection of a non-transiting outer planet in the system.
The host star's spin axis is nearly edge-on, indicating possible orbital alignment.
Abstract
We report the discovery of Kepler-432b, a giant planet () transiting an evolved star with an orbital period of days. Radial velocities (RVs) reveal that Kepler-432b orbits its parent star with an eccentricity of , which we also measure independently with asterodensity profiling (AP; ), thereby confirming the validity of AP on this particular evolved star. The well-determined planetary properties and unusually large mass also make this planet an important benchmark for theoretical models of super-Jupiter formation. Long-term RV monitoring detected the presence of a non-transiting outer planet (Kepler-432c; $M_c \sin{i_c} =…
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