WASP-25b: a 0.6 MJ planet in the Southern hemisphere

Abstract

We report the detection of a 0.6 MJ extrasolar planet by WASP-South, WASP-25b, transiting its solar-type host star every 3.76 days. A simultaneous analysis of the WASP, FTS and Euler photometry and CORALIE spectroscopy yields a planet of Rp = 1.22 RJ and Mp = 0.58 MJ around a slightly metal-poor solar-type host star, [Fe/H] = -0.05 0.10, of R = 0.92 R and M = 1.00 M. WASP-25b is found to have a density of p = 0.32 J, a low value for a sub-Jupiter mass planet. We investigate the relationship of planetary radius to planetary equilibrium temperature and host star metallicity for transiting exoplanets with a similar mass to WASP-25b, finding that these two parameters explain the radii of most low-mass planets well.

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