TOI-1431b/MASCARA-5b: A Highly Irradiated Ultra-Hot Jupiter Orbiting One of the Hottest & Brightest Known Exoplanet Host Stars

Abstract

We present the discovery of a highly irradiated and moderately inflated ultra-hot Jupiter, TOI-1431b/MASCARA-5b (HD 201033b), first detected by NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite mission (TESS) and the Multi-site All-Sky CAmeRA (MASCARA). The signal was established to be of planetary origin through radial velocity measurements obtained using SONG, SOPHIE, FIES, NRES, and EXPRES, which show a reflex motion of K=294.11.1 m s-1. A joint analysis of the TESS and ground-based photometry and radial velocity measurements reveals that TOI-1431b has a mass of Mp=3.120.18 MJ (99060 M), an inflated radius of Rp=1.490.05 RJ (16.70.6 R), and an orbital period of P=2.6502370.000003 d. Analysis of the spectral energy distribution of the host star reveals that the planet orbits a bright (V=8.049 mag) and young (0.29+0.32-0.19 Gyr) Am type star with T eff=7690+400-250 K, resulting in a highly irradiated planet with an incident flux of F =7.24+0.68-0.64×109 erg s-1 cm-2 (5300+500-470S) and an equilibrium temperature of Teq=237070 K. TESS photometry also reveals a secondary eclipse with a depth of 127+4-5ppm as well as the full phase curve of the planet's thermal emission in the red-optical. This has allowed us to measure the dayside and nightside temperature of its atmosphere as Tday=300464 K and Tnight=258363 K, the second hottest measured nightside temperature. The planet's low day/night temperature contrast (420 K) suggests very efficient heat transport between the dayside and nightside hemispheres.

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