TOI-519 b: a short-period substellar object around an M dwarf validated using multicolour photometry and phase curve analysis
H. Parviainen, E. Palle, M.R. Zapatero-Osorio, G. Nowak, A. Fukui, F., Murgas, N. Narita, K.G. Stassun, J.H. Livingston, K.A. Collins, D. Hidalgo, Soto, V.J.S. B\'ejar, J. Korth, M. Monelli, P. Montanes Rodriguez, N., Casasayas-Barris, G. Chen, N. Crouzet, J.P. de Leon

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and characterization of TOI-519 b, a short-period substellar object orbiting an M dwarf, using multicolour photometry and phase curve analysis to determine its properties and nature.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of TOI-519 b, combining multicolour transit data and phase curve modeling to constrain its size, temperature, and mass limits, clarifying its planetary or brown dwarf status.
Findings
TOI-519 b has a radius of approximately 1.07 RJup.
The object has an upper effective temperature limit of 1800 K.
The companion's mass is constrained to be less than 14 MJup.
Abstract
Context: We report the discovery of TOI-519 b (TIC 218795833), a transiting substellar object (R = 1.07 RJup) orbiting a faint M dwarf (V = 17.35) on a 1.26 d orbit. Brown dwarfs and massive planets orbiting M dwarfs on short-period orbits are rare, but more have already been discovered than expected from planet formation models. TOI-519 is a valuable addition into this group of unlikely systems, and adds towards our understanding of the boundaries of planet formation. Aims: We set out to determine the nature of the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS ) object of interest TOI-519 b. Methods: Our analysis uses a SPOC-pipeline TESS light curve from Sector 7, multicolour transit photometry observed with MuSCAT2 and MuSCAT, and transit photometry observed with the LCOGT telescopes. We estimate the radius of the transiting object using multicolour transit modelling, and set upper…
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