TESS Giants Transiting Giants II: The hottest Jupiters orbiting evolved stars
Samuel K. Grunblatt, Nicholas Saunders, Meng Sun, Ashley Chontos,, Melinda Soares-Furtado, Nora Eisner, Filipe Pereira, Thaddeus Komacek, Daniel, Huber, Karen Collins, Gavin Wang, Chris Stockdale, Samuel N. Quinn, Rene, Tronsgaard, George Zhou, Grzegorz Nowak, Hans J. Deeg

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery and characterization of three hot Jupiters orbiting evolved stars, revealing diverse radii and densities, and discusses implications for planetary inflation, orbital decay, and atmospheric composition around evolved stars.
Contribution
First detailed characterization of hot Jupiters around evolved stars combining TESS data with ground-based observations, highlighting diversity in planetary radii and densities.
Findings
One planet has the shortest period around a red giant.
Two planets are inflated, one is not.
No orbital decay detected despite predictions.
Abstract
Giant planets on short-period orbits are predicted to be inflated and eventually engulfed by their host stars. However, the detailed timescales and stages of these processes are not well known. Here we present the discovery of three hot Jupiters (P 10 d) orbiting evolved, intermediate-mass stars ( 1.5 M, 2 R 5 R). By combining \tess photometry with ground-based photometry and radial velocity measurements, we report masses and radii for these three planets between 0.4 and 1.8 M and 0.8 and 1.8 R. \planet has the shortest period (P=\period) of any planet discovered around a red giant star to date. Both \planettwo and \planetthree appear to be inflated, but \planet does not show any sign of inflation. The large radii and relatively low masses of \planettwo and \planetthree place them among the lowest…
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.
