HATS-31b Through HATS-35b: Five Transiting Hot Jupiters Discovered by the HATSouth Survey
astro-ph.EP
/ Authors
M. de Val-Borro, G. Á. Bakos, R. Brahm, J. D. Hartman, N. Espinoza, K. Penev, S. Ciceri, A. Jordán, W. Bhatti, Z. Csubry
and 17 more authors
D. Bayliss, J. Bento, G. Zhou, M. Rabus, L. Mancini, T. Henning, B. Schmidt, T. G. Tan, C. G. Tinney, D. J. Wright, L. Kedziora-Chudczer, J. Bailey, V. Suc, S. Durkan, J. Lázár, I. Papp, P. Sári
/ Abstract
We report the discovery of five new transiting hot Jupiter planets discovered by the HATSouth survey: HATS-31b through HATS-35b. These planets orbit moderately bright stars with V magnitudes within the range 11.9-14.4mag while the planets span a range of masses 0.88-1.22MJ, and have somewhat inflated radii between 1.23-1.64RJ.These planets can be classified as typical hot Jupiters, with HATS-31b and HATS-35b being moderately inflated gas giant planets with radii of $1.64 \pm 0.22$ RJ and 1.464+0.069-0.044RJ, respectively, that can be used to constrain inflation mechanisms. All five systems present a higher Bayesian evidence for a fixed circular orbit model than for an eccentric orbit. The orbital periods range from $1.8209993 \pm 0.0000016$ day for HATS-35b) to $3.377960 \pm 0.000012$ day for HATS-31b. Additionally, HATS-35b orbits a relatively young F star with an age of $2.13 \pm 0.51$ Gyr. We discuss the analysis to derive the properties of these systems and compare them in the context of the sample of well characterized transiting hot Jupiters known to date.