Giant planets around two intermediate-mass evolved stars and confirmation of the planetary nature of HIP67851 c
M. I. Jones, J. S. Jenkins, P. Rojo, C. H. F. melo

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of two giant planets around intermediate-mass evolved stars and confirms a third planet, highlighting the potential for such stars to host planetary systems and discussing the fate of close-in planets during stellar evolution.
Contribution
It presents new detections of giant planets around evolved intermediate-mass stars and confirms a previously suspected planet, expanding knowledge of planetary systems around such stars.
Findings
Two new giant planets discovered around HIP65891 and HIP107773.
Confirmation of the planetary nature of HIP67851 c.
Close-in planets around evolved stars may be destroyed during stellar evolution.
Abstract
Precision radial velocities are required to discover and characterize planets orbiting nearby stars. Optical and near infrared spectra that exhibit many hundreds of absorption lines can allow the m/s precision levels required for such work. However, this means that studies have generally focused on solar-type dwarf stars. After the main-sequence, intermediate-mass stars (former A-F stars) expand and rotate slower than their progenitors, thus thousands of narrow absorption lines appear in the optical region, permitting the search for planetary Doppler signals in the data for these types of stars. We present the discovery of two giant planets around the intermediate-mass evolved star HIP65891 and HIP107773. The best Keplerian fit to the HIP65891 and HIP107773 radial velocities leads to the following orbital parameters: P=1084.5 d; msin = 6.0 M; =0.13 and P=144.3 d;…
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