TOI-1518b: A Misaligned Ultra-hot Jupiter with Iron in its Atmosphere
astro-ph.EP
/ Authors
Samuel H. C. Cabot, Aaron Bello-Arufe, João M. Mendonça, René Tronsgaard, Ian Wong, George Zhou, Lars A. Buchhave, Debra A. Fischer, Keivan G. Stassun, Victoria Antoci
and 29 more authors
David Baker, Alexander A. Belinski, Björn Benneke, Luke G. Bouma, Jessie L. Christiansen, Karen A. Collins, Maria V. Goliguzova, Simone Hagey, Jon M. Jenkins, Eric L. N. Jensen, Richard C. Kidwell, Didier Laloum, Bob Massey, Kim K. McLeod, David W. Latham, Edward H. Morgan, George Ricker, Boris S. Safonov, Joshua E. Schlieder, Sara Seager, Avi Shporer, Jeffrey C. Smith
/ Abstract
We present the discovery of TOI-1518b -- an ultra-hot Jupiter orbiting a bright star $V = 8.95$. The transiting planet is confirmed using high-resolution optical transmission spectra from EXPRES. It is inflated, with $R_p = 1.875\pm0.053\,R_{\rm J}$, and exhibits several interesting properties, including a misaligned orbit (${240.34^{+0.93}_{-0.98}}$ degrees) and nearly grazing transit ($b =0.9036^{+0.0061}_{-0.0053}$). The planet orbits a fast-rotating F0 host star ($T_{\mathrm{eff}} \simeq 7300$ K) in 1.9 days and experiences intense irradiation. Notably, the TESS data show a clear secondary eclipse with a depth of $364\pm28$ ppm and a significant phase curve signal, from which we obtain a relative day-night planetary flux difference of roughly 320 ppm and a 5.2$σ$ detection of ellipsoidal distortion on the host star. Prompted by recent detections of atomic and ionized species in ultra-hot Jupiter atmospheres, we conduct an atmospheric cross-correlation analysis. We detect neutral iron (${5.2σ}$), at $K_p = 157^{+68}_{-44}$ km s$^{-1}$ and $V_{\rm sys} = -16^{+2}_{-4}$ km s$^{-1}$, adding another object to the small sample of highly irradiated gas-giant planets with Fe detections in transmission. Detections so far favor particularly inflated gas giants with radii $\gtrsim 1.78\,R_{\rm J}$; although this may be due to observational bias. With an equilibrium temperature of $T_{\rm eq}=2492\pm38$ K and a measured dayside brightness temperature of $3237\pm59$ K (assuming zero geometric albedo), TOI-1518b is a promising candidate for future emission spectroscopy to probe for a thermal inversion.