Two Massive Jupiters in Eccentric Orbits from the TESS Full Frame Images

Abstract

We report the discovery of two short-period massive giant planets from NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). Both systems, TOI-558 (TIC 207110080) and TOI-559 (TIC 209459275), were identified from the 30-minute cadence Full Frame Images and confirmed using ground-based photometric and spectroscopic follow-up observations from TESS's Follow-up Observing Program Working Group. We find that TOI-558 b, which transits an F-dwarf (M*=1.349+0.064-0.065\ M, R*=1.496+0.042-0.040\ R, Teff=6466+95-93\ K, age 1.79+0.91-0.73\ Gyr) with an orbital period of 14.574 days, has a mass of 3.610.15\ M J, a radius of 1.086+0.041-0.038\ R J, and an eccentric (e=0.300+0.022-0.020) orbit. TOI-559 b transits a G-dwarf (M*=1.0260.057\ M, R*=1.233+0.028-0.026\ R, Teff=5925+85-76\ K, age 6.8+2.5-2.0\ Gyr) in an eccentric (e=0.1510.011) 6.984-day orbit with a mass of 6.01+0.24-0.23\ M J and a radius of 1.091+0.028-0.025\ R J. Our spectroscopic follow-up also reveals a long-term radial velocity trend for TOI-559, indicating a long-period companion. The statistically significant orbital eccentricity measured for each system suggests that these planets migrated to their current location through dynamical interactions. Interestingly, both planets are also massive (>3\ M J), adding to the population of massive giant planets identified by TESS. Prompted by these new detections of high-mass planets, we analyzed the known mass distribution of hot and warm Jupiters but find no significant evidence for multiple populations. TESS should provide a near magnitude-limited sample of transiting hot Jupiters, allowing for future detailed population studies.

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