A Warm Massive Pair of Planets around TOI-1232 Revealed with Transit-timing Variations and Doppler Spectroscopy
Abstract
TOI-1232 is a G-dwarf star with a mass of 1.06-0.06+0.07 M, a radius of 1.07 0.05 R, and slightly higher metallicity than solar of Fe/H = 0.18 0.05. The star hosts a transiting warm Jovian-mass planet, TOI-1232 b, with an orbital period of Pb = 14.256-0.001+0.001 days, identified with data from multiple sectors of the TESS space telescope. The TESS light curve of TOI-1232 is complex, as it is contaminated by a background eclipsing binary with a period of 1.37 days. The TOI-1232 b was firmly confirmed by ground-based transit follow-up campaigns from Las Cumbres, Hazelwood, Brierfield, and ASTEP observatories.Additionally, the TESS transits of TOI-1232 b exhibit strong transit timing variations (TTVs) with a super-period of 235.5 0.7 days and a semi-amplitude of 27 minutes. Radial velocity (RV) follow-up with the FEROS spectrograph confirms the planetary nature of the transiting candidate, while a self-consistent N-body analysis of RVs and TTVs pinpoints the presence of a second outer Saturn-mass companion, TOI-1232 c with a period of Pc = 30.356-0.012+0.010 days. The TOI-1232 warm-giant system is particularly important due to the evidence of two massive planets that reside near the 2:1 commensurability but are not locked in a mean motion resonance (MMR). Thanks to TESS, we have revealed a handful of these rare systems. Hence, TOI-1232 is an important addition to understanding the formation and dynamical evolution of such compact, massive, warm giant planets.
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