WASP-92b, WASP-93b and WASP-118b: Three new transiting close-in giant planets

Abstract

We present the discovery of three new transiting giant planets, first detected with the WASP telescopes, and establish their planetary nature with follow up spectroscopy and ground-based photometric lightcurves. WASP-92 is an F7 star, with a moderately inflated planet orbiting with a period of 2.17 days, which has Rp = 1.461 0.077 R J and Mp = 0.805 0.068 M J. WASP-93b orbits its F4 host star every 2.73 days and has Rp = 1.597 0.077 R J and Mp = 1.47 0.029 M J. WASP-118b also has a hot host star (F6) and is moderately inflated, where Rp = 1.440 0.036 R J and Mp = 0.513 0.041 M J and the planet has an orbital period of 4.05 days. They are bright targets (V = 13.18, 10.97 and 11.07 respectively) ideal for further characterisation work, particularly WASP-118b, which is being observed by K2 as part of campaign 8. WASP-93b is expected to be tidally migrating outwards, which is divergent from the tidal behaviour of the majority of hot Jupiters discovered.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…