WASP-189b: an ultra-hot Jupiter transiting the bright A star HR 5599 in a polar orbit
Abstract
We report the discovery of WASP-189b: an ultra-hot Jupiter in a 2.72-d transiting orbit around the V = 6.6 A star WASP-189 (HR 5599). We detected periodic dimmings in the star's lightcurve, first with the WASP-South survey facility then with the TRAPPIST-South telescope. We confirmed that a planet is the cause of those dimmings via line-profile tomography and radial-velocity measurements using the HARPS and CORALIE spectrographs. Those reveal WASP-189b to be an ultra-hot Jupiter (M P = 2.13 0.28 M Jup; R P = 1.374 0.082 R Jup) in a polar orbit (λ = 89.3 1.4; = 90.0 5.8) around a rapidly rotating A6IV-V star (T eff = 8000 100 K; v* i* ≈ 100 km\, s-1). We calculate a predicted equilibrium temperature of T eql = 2641 34 K, assuming zero albedo and efficient redistribution, which is the third hottest for the known exoplanets. WASP-189 is the brightest known host of a transiting hot Jupiter and the third-brightest known host of any transiting exoplanet. We note that of the eight hot-Jupiter systems with T eff > 7000 K, seven have strongly misaligned orbits, and two of the three systems with T eff ≥ 8000 K have polar orbits (the third is aligned).