TOI-6883 b
Discovery | |
---|---|
Discovered by | Conzo G. & Moriconi M. and Sgro L. et al. |
Discovery site | Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite |
Discovery date | February 26, 2024 |
Transit | |
Designations | |
TIC 393818343 b | |
Orbital characteristics | |
Epoch J2000.0 | |
0.1291 ± 0.0021 AU (19,310,000 ± 310,000 km) | |
Eccentricity | 0.6058 ± 0.0023 |
16.24921 ± 0.00010 d | |
Inclination | 89.6 ± 0.30 |
2459810.145 ± 0.015 | |
1.69 ± 0.49 | |
Star | TOI-6883 |
Physical characteristics | |
1.087 ± 0.023 RJ | |
Mass | 4.34 ± 0.15 MJ |
Temperature | 805.5 ± 9.6 K (532.35 ± 9.60 °C; 990.23 ± 17.28 °F) |
TOI-6883 b is a Jupiter-like extrasolar planet orbiting TOI-6883, a Sun-like star in the Delphinus constellation at 307 light years from Earth.
Discovery
[edit]Discovered in 2024 by amateur astronomers using transit method on TESS data. At the beginning, a single transit event was identified, so the extrasolar planet was first classified as a candidate with TOI-6883.01[1] nomenclature. The discovery describes a planet with a radius of 1.087 times that of Jupiter, but without details on the orbital period.
The planet was confirmed by the professional astronomers of SETI team led by Lauren Sgro, who fully characterised it using the radial velocity method and orbital period was identified. TOI-6883 b revolves around its star in about 16.25 days at a distance of 0.123 AU (astronomical units) with a very eccentric orbit[2].
See also
[edit]
References
[edit]- ^ Conzo, G.; Moriconi, M. (26 February 2024). "TOI-6883.01: A Single-transit Planet Candidate Detected from TESS". Research Notes of the AAS. 8 (2): 53. Bibcode:2024RNAAS...8...53C. doi:10.3847/2515-5172/ad2c85. ISSN 2515-5172.
- ^ Sgro, Lauren A.; Dalba, Paul A.; Esposito, Thomas M.; Marchis, Franck; Dragomir, Diana; Villanueva, Steven; Fulton, Benjamin; Billiani, Mario; Loose, Margaret; Meneghelli, Nicola; Rivett, Darren; Saibi, Fadi; Saibi, Sophie; Martin, Bryan; Lekkas, Georgios (1 July 2024). "Confirmation and Characterization of the Eccentric, Warm Jupiter TIC 393818343 b with a Network of Citizen Scientists". The Astronomical Journal. 168 (1): 26. arXiv:2405.15021. Bibcode:2024AJ....168...26S. doi:10.3847/1538-3881/ad5096. ISSN 0004-6256.