KELT-12b: A $P \sim 5$ Day, Highly Inflated Hot Jupiter Transiting a Mildly Evolved Hot Star
Daniel J. Stevens, Karen A. Collins, B. Scott Gaudi, Thomas G. Beatty,, Robert J. Siverd, Allyson Bieryla, Benjamin J. Fulton, Justin R. Crepp, Erica, J. Gonzales, Carl T. Coker, Kaloyan Penev, Keivan G. Stassun, Eric L. N., Jensen, Andrew W. Howard, David W. Latham

TL;DR
KELT-12b is a highly inflated hot Jupiter orbiting a mildly evolved hot star, discovered through combined photometric and spectroscopic follow-up, highlighting the importance of monitoring hot stars for inflated exoplanets.
Contribution
This paper reports the discovery and detailed characterization of KELT-12b, an extremely inflated hot Jupiter around a hot, mildly evolved star, emphasizing the role of ground and space-based surveys in finding such planets.
Findings
KELT-12b has a radius of 1.79 R_J and a mass of 0.95 M_J.
The host star has T_eff = 6278 K and is mildly evolved.
KELT-12b receives high stellar flux, contributing to its inflation.
Abstract
We report the discovery of KELT-12b, a highly inflated Jupiter-mass planet transiting a mildly evolved host star. We identified the initial transit signal in the KELT-North survey data and established the planetary nature of the companion through precise follow-up photometry, high-resolution spectroscopy, precise radial velocity measurements, and high-resolution adaptive optics imaging. Our preferred best-fit model indicates that the host, TYC 2619-1057-1, has K, , and [Fe/H] = , with an inferred mass and radius . The planetary companion has , , , and density $\rho_{\rm P} =…
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