KELT-8b: A highly inflated transiting hot Jupiter and a new technique for extracting high-precision radial velocities from noisy spectra
Benjamin J. Fulton, Karen A. Collins, B. Scott Gaudi, Keivan G., Stassun, Joshua Pepper, Thomas G. Beatty, Robert J. Siverd, Kaloyan Penev,, Andrew W. Howard, Christoph Baranec, Giorgio Corfini, Jason D. Eastman, Joao, Gregorio, Nicholas M. Law, Michael B. Lund, Thomas E. Oberst

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of an extremely inflated hot Jupiter, KELT-8b, and introduces a new technique for extracting high-precision radial velocities from noisy spectra, enhancing exoplanet confirmation efficiency.
Contribution
The paper presents the discovery of KELT-8b, a highly inflated gas giant, and develops a novel method for obtaining precise radial velocities from noisy spectra, improving observational efficiency.
Findings
KELT-8b is one of the most inflated known transiting exoplanets.
The new radial velocity technique reduces the observing time for planet confirmation.
KELT-8b is an ideal target for atmospheric characterization due to its large scale height.
Abstract
We announce the discovery of a highly inflated transiting hot Jupiter discovered by the KELT-North survey. A global analysis including constraints from isochrones indicates that the V = 10.8 host star (HD 343246) is a mildly evolved, G dwarf with K, , , an inferred mass M, and radius R. The planetary companion has mass , radius , surface gravity , and density g cm. The planet is on a roughly circular orbit with semimajor axis AU and eccentricity . The best-fit linear ephemeris is $T_0 = 2456883.4803…
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