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  HATS-36b and 24 Other Transiting/Eclipsing Systems from the HATSouth-K2 Campaign 7 Program

Bayliss, D., Hartman, J. D., Zhou, G., Bakos, G. Á., Vanderburg, A., Bento, J., et al. (2018). HATS-36b and 24 Other Transiting/Eclipsing Systems from the HATSouth-K2 Campaign 7 Program. The Astronomical Journal, 155.

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Bayliss, D.1, Author
Hartman, J. D.1, Author
Zhou, G.1, Author
Bakos, G. Á.1, Author
Vanderburg, A.1, Author
Bento, J.1, Author
Mancini, L.1, Author
Ciceri, S.1, Author
Brahm, R.1, Author
Jordán, A.1, Author
Espinoza, N.1, Author
Rabus, M.1, Author
Tan, T. G.1, Author
Penev, K.1, Author
Bhatti, W.1, Author
de Val-Borro, M.1, Author
Suc, V.1, Author
Csubry, Z.1, Author
Henning, Th.1, Author
Sarkis, P.1, Author
Lázár, J.1, AuthorPapp, I.1, AuthorSári, P.1, Author more..
Affiliations:
1Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Max Planck Society and Cooperation Partners, ou_2421692              

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Free keywords: planetary systems stars: individual: HATS-36 techniques: photometric techniques: spectroscopic
 Abstract: We report on the result of a campaign to monitor 25 HATSouth candidates using the Kepler space telescope during Campaign 7 of the K2 mission. We discover HATS-36b (EPIC 215969174b, K2-145b), an eccentric (e=0.105+/- 0.028) hot Jupiter with a mass of 3.216+/- 0.062 {M}{{J}} and a radius of 1.235+/- 0.043 {R}{{J}}, which transits a solar- type G0V star (V = 14.386) in a 4.1752-day period. We also refine the properties of three previously discovered HATSouth transiting planets (HATS-9b, HATS-11b, and HATS-12b) and search the K2 data for TTVs and additional transiting planets in these systems. In addition, we also report on a further three systems that remain as Jupiter-radius transiting exoplanet candidates. These candidates do not have determined masses, however pass all of our other vetting observations. Finally, we report on the 18 candidates that we are now able to classify as eclipsing binary or blended eclipsing binary systems based on a combination of the HATSouth data, the K2 data, and follow-up ground- based photometry and spectroscopy. These range in periods from 0.7 day to 16.7 days, and down to 1.5 mmag in eclipse depths. Our results show the power of combining ground-based imaging and spectroscopy with higher precision space-based photometry, and serve as an illustration as to what will be possible when combining ground-based observations with TESS data.

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 Dates: 2018
 Publication Status: Issued
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Title: The Astronomical Journal
Source Genre: Journal
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Pages: - Volume / Issue: 155 Sequence Number: - Start / End Page: - Identifier: -