A Long-period Eccentric Substellar Companion to the Evovled Intermediate-Mass Star HD 14067

Abstract

We report the detection of a substellar companion orbiting an evolved intermediate-mass (M=2.4\,M) star HD 14067 (G9 III) using precise Doppler technique. Radial velocities of this star can be well fitted either by a periodic Keplerian variation with a decreasing linear velocity trend (P=1455 days, K1=92.2 m s-1, e=0.533, and γ=-22.4 m s-1 yr-1) or a single Keplerian orbit without linear trend (P=2850 days, K1=100.1 m s-1, and e=0.697). The minimum mass (m2i=7.8\,M J for the model with a linear trend, or m2i=9.0\,M J for the model without a linear trend) suggests a long-period giant planet around an evolved intermediate-mass star. The eccentricity of the orbit is among the highest known for planets ever detected around evolved stars.

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