Normalized to: 1).
[1]
oai:arXiv.org:0812.1161 [pdf] - 554063
HATNet Field G205: Follow-Up Observations of 28 Transiting-Planet
candidates and Confirmation of the Planet HAT-P-8b
Latham, David W.;
Bakos, GУЕspУЕr У?.;
Torres, Guillermo;
Stefanik, Robert P.;
Noyes, Robert W.;
KovУЕcs, GУ?za;
PУЕl, AndrУЕs;
Marcy, Geoffrey W.;
Fischer, Debra A.;
Butler, R. Paul;
(4, Brigitta Sip\H{o)cz;
1);
(1), Dimitar D. Sasselov;
(1), Gilbert A. Esquerdo;
(8), Steven S. Vogt;
(1), Joel D. Hartman;
(1), GУЕbor KovУЕcs;
(9), JУГzsef LУЕzУЕr;
(9), IstvУЕn Papp;
(, PУЕl SУЕri (9);
CfA;
Fellow, NSF;
Observatory, Konkoly;
ELTE;
Berkeley, UC;
SFSU;
Carnegie;
Cruz, UC Santa;
Association), Hungarian Astronomical
Submitted: 2008-12-05
We report the identification of 32 transiting-planet candidates in HATNet
field G205. We describe the procedures that we have used to follow up these
candidates with spectroscopic and photometric observations, and we present a
status report on our interpretation of the 28 candidates for which we have
follow-up observations. Eight are eclipsing binaries with orbital solutions
whose periods are consistent with their photometric ephemerides; two of these
spectroscopic orbits are singled-lined and six are double-lined. For one of the
candidates, a nearby but fainter eclipsing binary proved to be the source for
the HATNet light curve, due to blending in the HATNet images. Four of the
candidates were found to be rotating more rapidly than vsini = 50 km/s and were
not pursued further. Thirteen of the candidates showed no significant velocity
variation at the level of 0.5 to 1.0 km/s . Seven of these were eventually
withdrawn as photometric false alarms based on an independent reanalysis using
more sophisticated tools. Of the remaining six, one was put aside because a
close visual companion proved to be a spectroscopic binary, and two were not
followed up because the host stars were judged to be too large. Two of the
remaining candidates are members of a visual binary, one of which was
previously confirmed as the first HATNet transiting planet, HAT-P-1b. In this
paper we confirm that the last of this set of candidates is also a a transiting
planet, which we designate HAT-P-8b, with mass Mp = 1.52 +/- 0.18/0.16 Mjup,
radius Rp = 1.50 +/- 0.08/0.06 Rjup, and photometric period P = 3.076320 +/-
0.000004 days. HAT-P-8b has an inflated radius for its mass, and a large mass
for its period. The host star is a solar-metallicity F dwarf, with mass M* =
1.28 +/- 0.04 Msun and Rp = 1.58 +/- 0.08/0.06 Rsun.