WASP-128b: a transiting brown dwarf in the dynamical-tide regime
Abstract
Massive companions in close orbits around G dwarfs are thought to undergo rapid orbital decay due to runaway tidal dissipation. We report here the discovery of WASP-128b, a brown dwarf discovered by the WASP survey transiting a G0V host on a 2.2\,d orbit, where the measured stellar rotation rate places the companion in a regime where tidal interaction is dominated by dynamical tides. Under the assumption of dynamical equilibrium, we derive a value of the stellar tidal quality factor Q' = 6.96 0.19. A combined analysis of ground-based photometry and high-resolution spectroscopy reveals a mass and radius of the host, M = 1.16 0.04\,M, R = 1.16 0.02\,R, and for the companion, Mb =37.5 0.8\,MJup, Rb = 0.94 0.02\,RJup, placing WASP-128b in the driest parts of the brown dwarf desert, and suggesting a mild inflation for its age. We estimate a remaining lifetime for WASP-128b similar to that of some ultra-short period massive hot Jupiters, and note it may be a propitious candidate for measuring orbital decay and testing tidal theories.
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