A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Larger and faster: revised properties and a shorter orbital period for the WASP-57 planetary system from a pro-am collaboration




AuthorsSouthworth John, Mancini L., Tregloan-Reed J., Calchi Novati S., Ciceri S., D'Ago G., Delrez L., Dominik M., Evans D. F., Gillon M., Jehin E., Jørgensen U. G., Haugbølle T., Lendl M., Arena C., Barbieri L., Barbieri M., Corfini G., Lopresti C., Marchini A., Marino G., Alsubai K. A., Bozza V., Bramich D. M., Jaimes R. Figuera, Hinse T. C., Henning Th., Hundertmark M., Juncher D., Korhonen H., Popovas A., Rabus M., Rahvar S., Schmidt R. W., Skottfelt J., Snodgrass C., Starkey D., Surdej J., Wertz O.

PublisherOxford University Press

Publishing placeOxford

Publication year2015

JournalMonthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Journal acronymMNRAS

Volume454

Issue3

First page 3094

Last page3107

Number of pages14

ISSN0035-8711

eISSN1365-2966

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv2183

Web address http://mnras.oxfordjournals.org/content/454/3/3094


Abstract

Transits in the WASP-57 planetary system have been found to occur half an hour earlier than expected. We present 10 transit light curves from amateur telescopes, on which this discovery was based, 13 transit light curves from professional facilities which confirm and refine this finding, and high-resolution imaging which show no evidence for nearby companions. We use these data to determine a new and precise orbital ephemeris, and measure the physical properties of the system. Our revised orbital period is 4.5 s shorter than found from the discovery data alone, which explains the early occurrence of the transits. We also find both the star and planet to be larger and less massive than previously thought. The measured mass and radius of the planet are now consistent with theoretical models of gas giants containing no heavy-element core, as expected for the subsolar metallicity of the host star. Two transits were observed simultaneously in four passbands. We use the resulting light curves to measure the planet's radius as a function of wavelength, finding that our data are sufficient in principle but not in practise to constrain its atmospheric properties. We conclude with a discussion of the current and future status of transmission photometry studies for probing the atmospheres of gas-giant transiting planets.




Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 22:23