Literature DB >> 27324847

A hot Jupiter orbiting a 2-million-year-old solar-mass T Tauri star.

J F Donati, C Moutou, L Malo, C Baruteau, L Yu, E Hébrard, G Hussain, S Alencar, F Ménard, J Bouvier, P Petit, M Takami, R Doyon, A Collier Cameron.   

Abstract

Hot Jupiters are giant Jupiter-like exoplanets that orbit their host stars 100 times more closely than Jupiter orbits the Sun. These planets presumably form in the outer part of the primordial disk from which both the central star and surrounding planets are born, then migrate inwards and yet avoid falling into their host star. It is, however, unclear whether this occurs early in the lives of hot Jupiters, when they are still embedded within protoplanetary disks, or later, once multiple planets are formed and interact. Although numerous hot Jupiters have been detected around mature Sun-like stars, their existence has not yet been firmly demonstrated for young stars, whose magnetic activity is so intense that it overshadows the radial velocity signal that close-in giant planets can induce. Here we report that the radial velocities of the young star V830 Tau exhibit a sine wave of period 4.93 days and semi-amplitude 75 metres per second, detected with a false-alarm probability of less than 0.03 per cent, after filtering out the magnetic activity plaguing the spectra. We find that this signal is unrelated to the 2.741-day rotation period of V830 Tau and we attribute it to the presence of a planet of mass 0.77 times that of Jupiter, orbiting at a distance of 0.057 astronomical units from the host star. Our result demonstrates that hot Jupiters can migrate inwards in less than two million years, probably as a result of planet–disk interactions.

Entities:  

Year:  2016        PMID: 27324847     DOI: 10.1038/nature18305

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  2 in total

1.  Accreting protoplanets in the LkCa 15 transition disk.

Authors:  S Sallum; K B Follette; J A Eisner; L M Close; P Hinz; K Kratter; J Males; A Skemer; B Macintosh; P Tuthill; V Bailey; D Defrère; K Morzinski; T Rodigas; E Spalding; A Vaz; A J Weinberger
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2015-11-19       Impact factor: 49.962

2.  A young massive planet in a star-disk system.

Authors:  J Setiawan; Th Henning; R Launhardt; A Müller; P Weise; M Kürster
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2008-01-03       Impact factor: 49.962

  2 in total
  1 in total

1.  A planet within the debris disk around the pre-main-sequence star AU Microscopii.

Authors:  Peter Plavchan; Thomas Barclay; Jonathan Gagné; Peter Gao; Bryson Cale; William Matzko; Diana Dragomir; Sam Quinn; Dax Feliz; Keivan Stassun; Ian J M Crossfield; David A Berardo; David W Latham; Ben Tieu; Guillem Anglada-Escudé; George Ricker; Roland Vanderspek; Sara Seager; Joshua N Winn; Jon M Jenkins; Stephen Rinehart; Akshata Krishnamurthy; Scott Dynes; John Doty; Fred Adams; Dennis A Afanasev; Chas Beichman; Mike Bottom; Brendan P Bowler; Carolyn Brinkworth; Carolyn J Brown; Andrew Cancino; David R Ciardi; Mark Clampin; Jake T Clark; Karen Collins; Cassy Davison; Daniel Foreman-Mackey; Elise Furlan; Eric J Gaidos; Claire Geneser; Frank Giddens; Emily Gilbert; Ryan Hall; Coel Hellier; Todd Henry; Jonathan Horner; Andrew W Howard; Chelsea Huang; Joseph Huber; Stephen R Kane; Matthew Kenworthy; John Kielkopf; David Kipping; Chris Klenke; Ethan Kruse; Natasha Latouf; Patrick Lowrance; Bertrand Mennesson; Matthew Mengel; Sean M Mills; Tim Morton; Norio Narita; Elisabeth Newton; America Nishimoto; Jack Okumura; Enric Palle; Joshua Pepper; Elisa V Quintana; Aki Roberge; Veronica Roccatagliata; Joshua E Schlieder; Angelle Tanner; Johanna Teske; C G Tinney; Andrew Vanderburg; Kaspar von Braun; Bernie Walp; Jason Wang; Sharon Xuesong Wang; Denise Weigand; Russel White; Robert A Wittenmyer; Duncan J Wright; Allison Youngblood; Hui Zhang; Perri Zilberman
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2020-06-24       Impact factor: 49.962

  1 in total

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