KELT-14b and KELT-15b: An Independent Discovery of WASP-122b and a New Hot Jupiter
Joseph E. Rodriguez, Knicole D. Colon, Keivan G. Stassun, Duncan, Wright, Phillip A. Cargile, Daniel Bayliss, Joshua Pepper, Karen A. Collins,, Rudolf B. Kuhn, Michael B. Lund, Robert J. Siverd, George Zhou, B. Scott, Gaudi, C.G. Tinney, Kaloyan Penev, T.G. Tan, Chris Stockdale

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of two hot Jupiters, KELT-14b and KELT-15b, with detailed characterization, highlighting their inflated sizes, orbital parameters, and potential for ground-based secondary eclipse detection.
Contribution
It provides independent discoveries and detailed characterization of two hot Jupiters, including their stellar hosts, orbital parameters, and emission signal predictions.
Findings
KELT-14b is an inflated Jupiter with a 1.71-day orbit.
KELT-15b is an inflated Jupiter with a 3.33-day orbit.
Both planets have detectable secondary eclipses from ground-based observatories.
Abstract
We report the discovery of KELT-14b and KELT-15b, two hot Jupiters from the KELT-South survey. KELT-14b, an independent discovery of the recently announced WASP-122b, is an inflated Jupiter mass planet that orbits a Gyr, = 11.0, G2 star that is near the main sequence turnoff. The host star, KELT-14 (TYC 7638-981-1), has an inferred mass = and radius =, and has =K, = and =. The planet orbits with a period of days (=2457091.028630.00047) and has a radius R= and mass M=, and the eccentricity is consistent with zero. KELT-15b is another inflated Jupiter mass planet that orbits a Gyr, =…
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