Interferometric diameters of five evolved intermediate-mass planet-hosting stars measured with PAVO at the CHARA Array
T. R. White, D. Huber, A. W. Mann, L. Casagrande, S. K. Grunblatt, A., B. Justesen, V. Silva Aguirre, T. R. Bedding, M. J. Ireland, G. H. Schaefer,, P. G. Tuthill

TL;DR
This study uses optical interferometry to directly measure the radii and temperatures of five evolved intermediate-mass planet-hosting stars, providing more accurate fundamental properties to improve understanding of planet occurrence around such stars.
Contribution
The paper presents new direct measurements of stellar radii and temperatures for five evolved intermediate-mass stars, highlighting potential systematic errors in previous interferometric data and refining stellar mass estimates.
Findings
Measured stellar radii and temperatures with high precision.
Identified systematic discrepancies in previous interferometric measurements.
Suggests lower stellar masses than previously reported.
Abstract
Debate over the planet occurrence rates around intermediate-mass stars has hinged on the accurate determination of masses of evolved stars, and has been exacerbated by a paucity of reliable, directly-measured fundamental properties for these stars. We present long-baseline optical interferometry of five evolved intermediate-mass () planet-hosting stars using the PAVO beam combiner at the CHARA Array, which we combine with bolometric flux measurements and parallaxes to determine their radii and effective temperatures. We measured the radii and effective temperatures of 6 Lyncis (, ), 24 Sextantis (, ), Coronae Borealis (, ), HR 6817 (, ),…
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