Trials and Tribulations in the Reanalysis of KELT-24 b: a Case Study for the Importance of Stellar Modeling
Mark R. Giovinazzi, Bryson Cale, Jason D. Eastman, Joseph E., Rodriguez, Cullen H. Blake, Keivan G. Stassun, Thomas G. Beatty, Nate, McCrady, Andrew Vanderburg, Michelle Kunimoto, Adam L. Kraus, Joseph Twicken,, Cayla M. Dedrick, Jonathan Horner, John A. Johnson

TL;DR
This study reanalyzes the KELT-24 exoplanet system using diverse data and modeling approaches, emphasizing the critical role of stellar modeling in accurately determining system parameters and highlighting the impact of additional bodies.
Contribution
It compares multiple stellar modeling methods, demonstrating the importance of including spectral energy distribution data, and provides a detailed case study for improving exoplanet system analysis.
Findings
Models with SED fit poorly to data
Exclusion of SED yields more consistent parameters
Potential additional bodies influence system dynamics
Abstract
We present a new analysis of the KELT-24 system, comprising a well-aligned hot Jupiter, KELT-24~b, and a bright (), nearby () F-type host star. KELT-24~b was independently discovered by two groups in 2019, with each reporting best-fit stellar parameters that were notably inconsistent. Here, we present three independent analyses of the KELT-24 system, each incorporating a broad range of photometric and spectroscopic data, including eight sectors of TESS photometry and more than 200 new radial velocities (RVs) from MINERVA. Two of these analyses use KELT-24's observed spectral energy distribution (SED) through a direct comparison to stellar evolutionary models, while our third analysis assumes an unknown additional body contributing to the observed broadband photometry and excludes the SED. Ultimately, we find that the models that include the SED are a poor fit…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
