4.7 Article

Warm ice giant GJ 3470b-II. Revised planetary and stellar parameters from optical to near-infrared transit photometry

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 443, Issue 2, Pages 1810-1820

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stu1199

Keywords

techniques: photometric; techniques: spectroscopic; eclipses; planets and satellites: atmospheres; stars: individual: GJ 3470; infrared stars

Funding

  1. Lowell, Discovery Communications
  2. Boston University
  3. University of Maryland
  4. University of Toledo
  5. National Science Foundation [AST-1005313]
  6. University of Arizona Astronomy Club
  7. Science and Technology Facilities Council [ST/H005307/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  8. STFC [ST/H005307/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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It is important to explore the diversity of characteristics of low-mass, low-density planets to understand the nature and evolution of this class of planets. We present a homogeneous analysis of 12 new and 9 previously published broad-band photometric observations of the Uranus-sized extrasolar planet GJ 3470b, which belongs to the growing sample of sub-Jovian bodies orbiting M dwarfs. The consistency of our analysis explains some of the discrepancies between previously published results and provides updated constraints on the planetary parameters. Our data are also consistent with previous transit observations of this system. The physical properties of the transiting system can only be constrained as well as the host star is characterized, so we provide new spectroscopic measurements of GJ 3470 from 0.33 to 2.42 mu m to aid our analysis. We find R-* = 0.48 +/- 0.04 R-circle dot, M-* = 0.51 +/- 0.06 M-circle dot, and T-eff = 3652 +/- 50K for GJ 3470, along with a rotation period of 20.70 +/- 0.15 d and an R-band amplitude of 0.01 mag, which is small enough that current transit measurements should not be strongly affected by stellar variability. However, to report definitively whether stellar activity has a significant effect on the light curves, this requires future multiwavelength, multi-epoch studies of GJ 3470. We also present the most precise orbital ephemeris for this system: T-o = 2455983.70472 +/- 0.00021BJD(TDB), P = 3.336 6487(-0.000 0033)(+ 0.000 0043) d, and we see no evidence for transit timing variations greater than 1 min. Our reported planet to star radius ratio is 0.076 42 +/- 0.000 37. The physical parameters of this planet are R-p = 3.88 +/- 0.32 R-circle plus and M-p = 13.73 +/- 1.61 M-circle plus. Because of our revised stellar parameters, the planetary radius we present is smaller than previously reported values. We also perform a second analysis of the transmission spectrum of the entire ensemble of transit observations to date, supporting the existence of an H-2-dominated atmosphere exhibiting a strong Rayleigh scattering slope.

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