NGTS-13b: A hot 4.8 Jupiter-mass planet transiting a subgiant star
Nolan Grieves, Louise D. Nielsen, Jose I. Vines, Edward M. Bryant,, Samuel Gill, Fran\c{c}ois Bouchy, Monika Lendl, Daniel Bayliss, Philipp, Eigmueller, Damien Segransan, Jack S. Acton, David R. Anderson, Matthew R., Burleigh, Sarah L. Casewell, Alexander Chaushev

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and characterization of NGTS-13b, a massive hot Jupiter around a subgiant star, providing insights into formation mechanisms of massive giant planets near the 4 M_Jup threshold.
Contribution
The discovery of NGTS-13b adds valuable data on massive hot Jupiters around evolved stars, aiding understanding of their formation and occurrence around high-metallicity hosts.
Findings
NGTS-13b has a mass of 4.84 M_Jup and radius of 1.142 R_Jup.
The host star is a subgiant with high metallicity [Fe/H]=0.25.
NGTS-13b's properties support the idea that massive giants may form via similar mechanisms as brown dwarfs.
Abstract
We report the discovery of the massive hot Jupiter NGTS-13b by the Next Generation Transit Survey (NGTS). The V = 12.7 host star is likely in the subgiant evolutionary phase with log g = 4.04 0.05, T = 5819 73 K, M = 1.30 M, and R = 1.79 0.06 R. NGTS detected a transiting planet with a period of P = 4.12 days around the star, which was later validated with the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS; TIC 454069765). We confirm the planet using radial velocities from the CORALIE spectrograph. Using NGTS and TESS full-frame image photometry combined with CORALIE radial velocities we determine NGTS-13b to have a radius of R = 1.142 0.046 R, mass of M = 4.84 0.44 M and eccentricity e = 0.086 0.034. Some previous studies suggest that 4 M may be a…
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