KELT-11b: A Highly Inflated Sub-Saturn Exoplanet Transiting the V=8 Subgiant HD 93396
Joshua Pepper, Joseph E. Rodriguez, Karen A. Collins, John Asher, Johnson, Benjamin J. Fulton, Andrew W. Howard, Thomas Beatty, Keivan G., Stassun, Howard Isaacson, Knicole d. Col\'on, Michael B. Lund, Rudolf B., Kuhn, Robert J. Siverd, B. Scott Gaudi, T.G. Tan, Ivan Curtis

TL;DR
KELT-11b is a highly inflated, low-mass gas giant transiting a bright subgiant star, making it an excellent target for atmospheric studies and a benchmark for inflated exoplanets.
Contribution
This paper reports the discovery and detailed characterization of KELT-11b, a highly inflated exoplanet orbiting a bright subgiant star, highlighting its suitability for atmospheric analysis.
Findings
KELT-11b has a large atmospheric scale height of 2763 km.
The planet's transmission signal is estimated at 5.6%.
KELT-11 is the brightest known transiting exoplanet host in the southern hemisphere.
Abstract
We report the discovery of a transiting exoplanet, KELT-11b, orbiting the bright () subgiant HD 93396. A global analysis of the system shows that the host star is an evolved subgiant star with K, , , log , and [Fe/H]. The planet is a low-mass gas giant in a day orbit, with , , g cm, surface gravity log , and equilibrium temperature K. KELT-11 is the brightest known transiting exoplanet host in the southern hemisphere by more than a magnitude, and is the 6th brightest transit host to date. The planet is one of the most inflated planets…
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