A long-period substellar object exhibiting a single transit in Kepler
Abstract
We report the detection of a single transit-like signal in the Kepler data of the slightly evolved F star KIC4918810. The transit duration is ~45 hours, and while the orbital period (P10 years) is not well constrained, it is one of the longest among companions known to transit. We calculate the size of the transiting object to be RP = 0.910 RJ. Objects of this size vary by orders of magnitude in their densities, encompassing masses between that of Saturn (0.3 MJ) and stars above the hydrogen-burning limit (~80 MJ). Radial-velocity observations reveal that the companion is unlikely to be a star. The mass posterior is bimodal, indicating a mass of either ~0.24 MJ or ~26 MJ. Continued spectroscopic monitoring should either constrain the mass to be planetary or detect the orbital motion, the latter of which would yield a benchmark long-period brown dwarf with a measured mass, radius, and age.
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