Three new brown dwarfs and a massive hot Jupiter revealed by TESS around early-type stars
Psaridi A., Bouchy F., Lendl M., Grieves N., Stassun K.G., Carmichael, T., Gill S., Pe\~na Rojas P.A., Gan T., Shporer A., Bieryla A., Christiansen, J.L, Crossfield I.J.M, Galland F. Hooton M.J. Jenkins J.M, Jenkins J.S,, Latham D.W, Lund M.B, Rodriguez J.E, Ting E.B

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery and characterization of three brown dwarfs and a hot Jupiter around early-type stars using TESS data, enhancing understanding of massive companions' properties and formation around hot stars.
Contribution
First detection of three brown dwarfs and a hot Jupiter around early-type stars with detailed mass, radius, and orbital measurements, expanding the sample of such systems.
Findings
Brown dwarfs have masses between 66 and 68 M_Jup.
The hot Jupiter has a period of 4.08 days and a mass of 3.35 M_Jup.
Some companions show inflated radii and high eccentricities.
Abstract
The detection and characterization of exoplanets and brown dwarfs (BDs) around massive AF-type stars is essential to investigate and constrain the impact of stellar mass on planet properties. However, such targets are still poorly explored in radial velocity (RV) surveys because they only feature a small number of stellar lines and those are usually broadened and blended by stellar rotation as well as stellar jitter. As a result, the available information about the formation and evolution of planets and BDs around hot stars is limited. We aim to increase the sample and precisely measure the masses and eccentricities of giant planets and BDs transiting AF-type stars detected by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). We followed bright (V < 12 mag) stars with > 6200 K that host giant companions (R > 7 ) using ground-based photometric…
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.
