TAPAS IV. TYC 3667-1280-1 b - the most massive red giant star hosting a warm Jupiter
A. Niedzielski, E. Villaver, G. Nowak, M. Adam\'ow, G. Maciejewski, K., Kowalik, A. Wolszczan, B. Deka-Szymankiewicz, and M. Adamczyk

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a warm Jupiter orbiting a very massive, evolved red giant star, providing valuable insights into planet formation and migration around such stars.
Contribution
It presents the first detection of a close-in giant planet around the most massive and oldest known red giant star hosting a warm Jupiter.
Findings
Discovered a warm Jupiter with 5.4 M_J orbiting a 1.87 M_sun giant star.
The planet has a 26.468-day orbit with a near-circular trajectory.
The host star's properties and planet's orbit offer constraints on migration theories.
Abstract
We present the latest result of the TAPAS project that is devoted to intense monitoring of planetary candidates that are identified within the PennState-Toru\'n planet search. We aim to detect planetary systems around evolved stars to be able to build sound statistics on the frequency and intrinsic nature of these systems, and to deliver in-depth studies of selected planetary systems with evidence of star-planet interaction processes. The paper is based on precise radial velocity measurements: 13 epochs collected over 1920 days with the Hobby-Eberly Telescope and its High-Resolution Spectrograph, and 22 epochs of ultra-precise HARPS-N data collected over 961 days. We present a warm-Jupiter (, 0.4) companion with an orbital period of 26.468 days in a circular () orbit around a giant evolved (,…
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