WASP-92b, WASP-93b and WASP-118b: Three new transiting close-in giant planets
K. L. Hay, A. Collier-Cameron, A. P. Doyle, G. H\'ebrard, I. Skillen,, D. R. Anderson, S. C. C. Barros, D. J. A. Brown, F. Bouchy, R. Busuttil, P., Delorme, L. Delrez, O. Demangeon, R. F. D\'iaz, M. Gillon, E. Gonz\`alez, C., Hellier, S. Holmes, J. F. Jarvis, E. Jehin

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and characterization of three new transiting hot Jupiters from the WASP survey, providing detailed planetary parameters and highlighting their suitability for further study, including unique tidal migration behavior.
Contribution
The paper presents three newly discovered transiting giant planets with detailed parameters, expanding the known population and identifying their potential for future detailed characterization.
Findings
All three planets are hot Jupiters with short orbital periods.
WASP-93b shows evidence of outward tidal migration.
The planets are bright targets suitable for follow-up observations.
Abstract
We present the discovery of three new transiting giant planets, first detected with the WASP telescopes, and establish their planetary nature with follow up spectroscopy and ground-based photometric lightcurves. WASP-92 is an F7 star, with a moderately inflated planet orbiting with a period of 2.17 days, which has and . WASP-93b orbits its F4 host star every 2.73 days and has and . WASP-118b also has a hot host star (F6) and is moderately inflated, where and and the planet has an orbital period of 4.05 days. They are bright targets (V = 13.18, 10.97 and 11.07 respectively) ideal for further characterisation work, particularly WASP-118b, which is being observed by K2 as part of campaign 8.…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
