Three Hot Jupiters transiting K-dwarfs with a significant heavy element mass
Y.G.C. Frensch, F. Bouchy, G. Lo Curto, S. Ulmer-Moll, S.G. Sousa, N.C. Santos, K.G. Stassun, C.N. Watkins, H. Chakraborty, K. Barkaoui, M. Battley, W. Ceva, K.A. Collins, T. Daylan, P. Evans, J.P. Faria, C. Farret Jentink, E. Fontanet, E. Frid\'en, G. Furesz, M. Gillon

TL;DR
This study confirms and characterizes three Hot Jupiters transiting mid-K dwarf stars, revealing their heavy element content and providing insights into the population of massive planets around low-mass stars.
Contribution
First detailed characterization of three Hot Jupiters around mid-K dwarfs, including heavy element mass estimates, expanding knowledge of planetary systems around low-mass stars.
Findings
All three planets are Hot Jupiters with no radius inflation.
Heavy element masses are significantly higher than typical for K-dwarf Hot Jupiters.
The planets' properties contribute to understanding massive companions around low-mass stars.
Abstract
Albeit at a lower frequency than around hotter stars, short-period gas giants around low-mass stars ( K) do exist, despite predictions from planetary population synthesis models that such systems should be exceedingly rare. By combining data from TESS and ground-based follow-up observations, we seek to confirm and characterize giant planets transiting K dwarfs, particularly mid/late K dwarfs. Photometric data were obtained from the TESS mission, supplemented by ground-based imaging- and photometric observations, as well as high-resolution spectroscopic data from the CORALIE spectrograph. Radial velocity (RV) measurements were analyzed to confirm the presence of companions. We report the confirmation and characterization of three giants transiting mid-K dwarfs. Within the TOI-2969 system, a giant planet of and a radius of $1.10 \pm…
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