4.7 Article

WASP-10b: a 3MJ, gas-giant planet transiting a late-type K star

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 392, Issue 4, Pages 1585-1590

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2008.14164.x

Keywords

methods: data analysis; techniques: photometric; techniques: radial velocities; stars: planetary systems

Funding

  1. STFC [ST/F002270/1, PP/F000057/1, PP/F000065/1, PP/D000955/1, PP/D000963/1, PP/F000081/1, ST/G001987/1, ST/G002355/1, ST/F002599/1, ST/G002533/1, PP/D000890/1, ST/J000035/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  2. Science and Technology Facilities Council [PP/D000890/1, ST/G002533/1, PP/F000065/1, ST/F002599/1, ST/F002270/1, PP/F000057/1, PP/D000963/1, ST/G001987/1, PP/F000081/1, PP/D000955/1, ST/G002355/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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We report the discovery of WASP-10b, a new transiting extrasolar planet (ESP) discovered by the Wide Angle Search for Planets ( WASP) Consortium and confirmed using Nordic Optical Telescope FIbre-fed Echelle Spectrograph and SOPHIE radial velocity data. A 3.09-d period, 29 mmag transit depth and 2.36 h duration are derived for WASP-10b using WASP and high-precision photometric observations. Simultaneous fitting to the photometric and radial velocity data using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo procedure leads to a planet radius of 1.28R(J), a mass of 2.96M(J) and eccentricity of approximate to 0.06. WASP-10b is one of the more massive transiting ESPs, and we compare its characteristics to the current sample of transiting ESP, where there is currently little information for masses greater than approximate to 2M(J) and non-zero eccentricities. WASP-10's host star, GSC 2752-00114 (USNO-B1.0 1214-0586164) is among the fainter stars in the WASP sample, with V = 12.7 and a spectral type of K5. This result shows promise for future late-type dwarf star surveys.

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