TOI-2109b: An Ultrahot Gas Giant on a 16 hr Orbit
Ian Wong, Avi Shporer, George Zhou, Daniel Kitzmann, Thaddeus D., Komacek, Xianyu Tan, Ren\'e Tronsgaard, Lars A. Buchhave, Shreyas, Vissapragada, Michael Greklek-McKeon, Joseph E. Rodriguez, John P. Ahlers,, Samuel N. Quinn, Elise Furlan, Steve B. Howell, Allyson Bieryla

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and characterization of TOI-2109b, an ultrahot Jupiter with an extremely short 16-hour orbit, making it the second hottest exoplanet known, and discusses its potential for future studies on orbital decay and atmospheric escape.
Contribution
The paper presents the first detailed characterization of TOI-2109b, including its orbit, mass, temperature, and alignment, highlighting its status as an ultrahot Jupiter with unique observational opportunities.
Findings
Orbital period of approximately 16 hours confirmed.
Dayside brightness temperature of about 3631 K, second hottest exoplanet.
Well-aligned orbit with a low sky-projected obliquity.
Abstract
We report the discovery of an ultrahot Jupiter with an extremely short orbital period of days (16 hr). The planet, initially identified by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) mission, orbits TOI-2109 (TIC 392476080): a K F-type star with a mass of , a radius of , and a rotational velocity of km s. The planetary nature of TOI-2109b was confirmed through radial velocity measurements, which yielded a planet mass of . Analysis of the Doppler shadow in spectroscopic transit observations indicates a well-aligned system, with a sky-projected obliquity of . From the TESS full-orbit light curve, we measured a…
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