Using HARPS-N to characterise the long-period planets in the PH-2 and Kepler-103 systems

Abstract

We present confirmation of the planetary nature of PH-2b, as well as the first mass estimates for the two planets in the Kepler-103 system. PH-2b and Kepler-103c are both long-period and transiting, a sparsely-populated category of exoplanet. We use Kepler light-curve data to estimate a radius, and then use HARPS-N radial velocities to determine the semi-amplitude of the stellar reflex motion and, hence, the planet mass. For PH-2b we recover a 3.5-σ mass estimate of Mp = 109+30-32 M and a radius of Rp = 9.490.16 R. This means that PH-2b has a Saturn-like bulk density and is the only planet of this type with an orbital period P > 200 days that orbits a single star. We find that Kepler-103b has a mass of Mp,b = 11.7+4.31-4.72 M and Kepler-103c has a mass of Mp,c = 58.5+11.2-11.4 M. These are 2.5σ and 5σ results, respectively. With radii of Rp,b = 3.49+0.06-0.05 R, and Rp,c = 5.45+0.18-0.17 R, these results suggest that Kepler-103b has a Neptune-like density, while Kepler-103c is one of the highest density planets with a period P > 100 days. By providing high-precision estimates for the masses of the long-period, intermediate-mass planets PH-2b and Kepler-103c, we increase the sample of long-period planets with known masses and radii, which will improve our understanding of the mass-radius relation across the full range of exoplanet masses and radii.

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