Mass Constraints of the WASP-47 Planetary System from Radial Velocities
Evan Sinukoff, Andrew W. Howard, Erik A. Petigura, Benjamin J. Fulton,, Howard Isaacson, Lauren M. Weiss, John M. Brewer, Brad M. S. Hansen, Lea, Hirsch, Jessie L. Christiansen, Justin R. Crepp, Ian J. M. Crossfield, Joshua, E. Schlieder, David R. Ciardi, Charles A. Beichman

TL;DR
This study refines the mass and density measurements of the planets in the WASP-47 system using combined radial velocity data, revealing detailed compositions and orbital parameters.
Contribution
It provides significantly more precise mass and density estimates for all planets in the system, including the non-transiting outer planet, improving understanding of their compositions and dynamics.
Findings
Super-Earth has a rocky composition with density 7.63 g/cm^3.
Hot Jupiter's mass is 356 Earth masses with eccentricity <0.021.
Outer planet's minimum mass is 411 Earth masses with eccentricity 0.27.
Abstract
We report precise radial velocity (RV) measurements of WASP-47, a G star that hosts three transiting planets in close proximity (a hot Jupiter, a super-Earth and a Neptune-sized planet) and a non-transiting planet at 1.4 AU. Through a joint analysis of previously published RVs and our own Keck-HIRES RVs, we significantly improve the planet mass and bulk density measurements. For the super-Earth WASP-47e ( = 0.79 days), we measure a mass of 9.11 1.17 , and a bulk density of 7.63 1.90 g cm, consistent with a rocky composition. For the hot Jupiter WASP-47b ( = 4.2 days), we measure a mass of 356 12 (1.12 0.04 M_\rm{Jup}) and constrain its eccentricity to at 3- confidence. For the Neptune-size planet WASP-47d ( = 9.0 days), we measure a mass of 12.75 2.70 , and a bulk density of 1.36 0.42 g…
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.
