Spinning up a Daze: TESS Uncovers a Hot Jupiter orbiting the Rapid-Rotator TOI-778
Jake Clark, Brett Addison, Jack Okumura, Sydney Vach, Alexis, Heitzmann, Joseph Rodriguez, Duncan Wright, Mathieu Clerte, Carolyn Brown,, Tara Fetherolf, Robert Wittenmyer, Peter Plavchan, Stephen Kane, Jonathan, Horner, John Kielkopf, Avi Shporer, C. Tinney, Liu Hui-Gen

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and characterization of a hot Jupiter orbiting a rapidly rotating early F-type star using TESS data and ground-based follow-up, demonstrating the capability of small telescopes to study such systems.
Contribution
First detection of a hot Jupiter around a rapid rotator using combined TESS and ground-based data, highlighting the effectiveness of small aperture telescopes for these challenging targets.
Findings
Confirmed the planet's mass, radius, and orbit from combined data.
Measured a near-aligned spin-orbit angle of 18 degrees.
Showed small telescopes can detect RV signals from broad-line stars.
Abstract
NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) mission, has been uncovering a growing number of exoplanets orbiting nearby, bright stars. Most exoplanets that have been discovered by TESS orbit narrow-line, slow-rotating stars, facilitating the confirmation and mass determination of these worlds. We present the discovery of a hot Jupiter orbiting a rapidly rotating (km/s) early F3V-dwarf, HD115447 (TOI-778). The transit signal taken from Sectors 10 and 37 of TESS's initial detection of the exoplanet is combined with follow-up ground-based photometry and velocity measurements taken from Minerva-Australis, TRES, CORALIE and CHIRON to confirm and characterise TOI-778b. A joint analysis of the light curves and the radial velocity measurements yield a mass, radius, and orbital period for TOI-778b of Mjup, Rjup and …
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
