KELT-21b: A Hot Jupiter Transiting the Rapidly Rotating Metal-poor Late-A Primary of a Likely Hierarchical Triple System

We present the discovery of KELT-21b, a hot Jupiter transiting the V = 10.5 A8V star HD 332124. The planet has an orbital period of P = 3.6127647 ± 0.0000033 days and a radius of . We set an upper limit on the planetary mass of at confidence. We confirmed the planetary nature of the transiting companion using this mass limit and Doppler tomographic observations to verify that the companion transits HD 332124. These data also demonstrate that the planetary orbit is well-aligned with the stellar spin, with a sky-projected spin–orbit misalignment of . The star has K, , , and km s−1, the highest projected rotation velocity of any star known to host a transiting hot Jupiter. The star also appears to be somewhat metal poor and α-enhanced, with and [α/Fe] = 0.145 ± 0.053; these abundances are unusual, but not extraordinary, for a young star with thin-disk kinematics like KELT-21. High-resolution imaging observations revealed the presence of a pair of stellar companions to KELT-21, located at a separation of 1.″2 and with a combined contrast of with respect to the primary. Although these companions are most likely physically associated with KELT-21, we cannot confirm this with our current data. If associated, the candidate companions KELT-21 B and C would each have masses of ∼0.12 , a projected mutual separation of ∼20 au, and a projected separation of ∼500 au from KELT-21. KELT-21b may be one of only a handful of known transiting planets in hierarchical triple stellar systems.

[1]  T. Thompson,et al.  Dynamics of quadruple systems composed of two binaries: stars, white dwarfs, and implications for Ia supernovae , 2017, 1709.08682.

[2]  Ghina M. Halabi,et al.  Binary stars in the Galactic thick disc , 2017, 1709.05237.

[3]  D. A. García-Hernández,et al.  University of Birmingham The Fourteenth Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey: , 2017 .

[4]  Keivan G. Stassun,et al.  The TESS Input Catalog and Candidate Target List , 2017, The Astronomical Journal.

[5]  H. Rix,et al.  Confirming chemical clocks: asteroseismic age dissection of the Milky Way disc(s) , 2017, 1710.09847.

[6]  D. A. García-Hernández,et al.  The First APOKASC Catalog of Kepler Dwarf and Subgiant Stars , 2017, 1710.06858.

[7]  G. Marcy,et al.  Constraints on the Obliquities of Kepler Planet-hosting Stars , 2017, 1710.04530.

[8]  Keivan G. Stassun,et al.  KELT-19Ab: A P ∼ 4.6-day Hot Jupiter Transiting a Likely Am Star with a Distant Stellar Companion , 2017, 1709.07010.

[9]  Astrophysics,et al.  Asteroseismic masses of retired planet-hosting A-stars using SONG , 2017, 1708.09613.

[10]  Marshall C. Johnson,et al.  Spin–Orbit Misalignments of Three Jovian Planets via Doppler Tomography , 2017, 1708.01291.

[11]  M. F. Andersen,et al.  MASCARA-1 b. A hot Jupiter transiting a bright m V = 8.3 A-star in a misaligned orbit , 2017, 1707.04262.

[12]  Keivan G. Stassun,et al.  KELT-20b: A Giant Planet with a Period of P ∼ 3.5 days Transiting the V ∼ 7.6 Early A Star HD 185603 , 2017, 1707.01518.

[13]  M. F. Andersen,et al.  MASCARA-2 b: A hot Jupiter transiting a $m_V=7.6$ A-star , 2017, 1707.01500.

[14]  Andrew Gould,et al.  A giant planet undergoing extreme-ultraviolet irradiation by its hot massive-star host , 2017, Nature.

[15]  R. G. West,et al.  WASP-167b/KELT-13b: Joint discovery of a hot Jupiter transiting a rapidly-rotating F1V star , 2017, 1704.07771.

[16]  Aniruddha R. Thakar,et al.  Sloan Digital Sky Survey IV: Mapping the Milky Way, Nearby Galaxies, and the Distant Universe , 2017, 1703.00052.

[17]  M. Penny,et al.  KELT-18b: Puffy Planet, Hot Host, Probably Perturbed , 2017, 1702.01657.

[18]  A. Hamers On the formation of hot and warm Jupiters via secular high-eccentricity migration in stellar triples , 2017, 1701.01733.

[19]  M. Penny,et al.  KELT-12b: A P ∼ 5 day, Highly Inflated Hot Jupiter Transiting a Mildly Evolved Hot Star , 2016, 1608.04714.

[20]  Keivan G. Stassun,et al.  KELT-11b: A Highly Inflated Sub-Saturn Exoplanet Transiting the V = 8 Subgiant HD 93396 , 2016, 1607.01755.

[21]  T. Guillot,et al.  Discovery of XO-6b: A Hot Jupiter Transiting a Fast Rotating F5 Star on an Oblique Orbit , 2016, 1612.02776.

[22]  K. Stassun,et al.  EVIDENCE FOR A SYSTEMATIC OFFSET OF −0.25 mas IN THE GAIA DR1 PARALLAXES , 2016, 1609.05390.

[23]  Observatoire de la Côte d'Azur,et al.  Gaia Data Release 1. Summary of the astrometric, photometric, and survey properties , 2016, 1609.04172.

[24]  Henry Ngo,et al.  KELT-16b: A Highly Irradiated, Ultra-short Period Hot Jupiter Nearing Tidal Disruption , 2016, 1608.00618.

[25]  Joseph E. Rodriguez,et al.  KELT-17B: A HOT-JUPITER TRANSITING AN A-STAR IN A MISALIGNED ORBIT DETECTED WITH DOPPLER TOMOGRAPHY , 2016, 1607.03512.

[26]  Henry Ngo,et al.  FRIENDS OF HOT JUPITERS. IV. STELLAR COMPANIONS BEYOND 50 au MIGHT FACILITATE GIANT PLANET FORMATION, BUT MOST ARE UNLIKELY TO CAUSE KOZAI–LIDOV MIGRATION , 2016, 1606.07102.

[27]  P. Berlind,et al.  Spin-orbit alignment for KELT-7b and HAT-P-56b via Doppler tomography with TRES , 2016, 1605.01991.

[28]  A. Jorissen,et al.  Cannibals in the thick disk: the young α-rich stars as evolved blue stragglers , 2016, 1603.08992.

[29]  S. Martell,et al.  GRACES observations of young [α/Fe]-rich stars , 2016, 1603.07034.

[30]  H. Rix,et al.  CONSTRUCTING POLYNOMIAL SPECTRAL MODELS FOR STARS , 2016, 1603.06574.

[31]  E. Kerins,et al.  High-resolution Imaging of Transiting Extrasolar Planetary systems (HITEP). I. Lucky imaging observations of 101 systems in the southern hemisphere , 2016, 1603.03274.

[32]  H. Rix,et al.  ACCELERATED FITTING OF STELLAR SPECTRA , 2016, 1602.06947.

[33]  Miguel de Val-Borro,et al.  HAT-P-57b: A SHORT-PERIOD GIANT PLANET TRANSITING A BRIGHT RAPIDLY ROTATING A8V STAR CONFIRMED VIA DOPPLER TOMOGRAPHY , 2015, 1510.08839.

[34]  Keivan G. Stassun,et al.  KELT-4Ab: AN INFLATED HOT JUPITER TRANSITING THE BRIGHT (V ∼ 10) COMPONENT OF A HIERARCHICAL TRIPLE , 2015, 1510.00015.

[35]  H. Rix,et al.  THE STELLAR POPULATION STRUCTURE OF THE GALACTIC DISK , 2015, 1509.05796.

[36]  Marshall C. Johnson,et al.  MEASUREMENT OF THE NODAL PRECESSION OF WASP-33 b VIA DOPPLER TOMOGRAPHY , 2015, 1508.02398.

[37]  D. A. García-Hernández,et al.  Young α-enriched giant stars in the solar neighbourhood , 2015 .

[38]  Eugene Magnier,et al.  A THREE-DIMENSIONAL MAP OF MILKY WAY DUST , 2015, 1507.01005.

[39]  Keivan G. Stassun,et al.  KELT-8b: A HIGHLY INFLATED TRANSITING HOT JUPITER AND A NEW TECHNIQUE FOR EXTRACTING HIGH-PRECISION RADIAL VELOCITIES FROM NOISY SPECTRA , 2015, 1505.06738.

[40]  E. Popow,et al.  PEPSI: The high-resolution ichelle spectrograph and polarimeter for the Large Binocular Telescope , 2015, 1505.06492.

[41]  C. Prieto,et al.  Young [α/Fe]-enhanced stars discovered by CoRoT and APOGEE: What is their origin? , 2015, 1503.06990.

[42]  Timothy D. Morton,et al.  isochrones: Stellar model grid package , 2015 .

[43]  Keivan G. Stassun,et al.  KELT-7b: A HOT JUPITER TRANSITING A BRIGHT V = 8.54 RAPIDLY ROTATING F-STAR , 2015, The Astronomical Journal.

[44]  Annie C. Robin,et al.  ABUNDANCES, STELLAR PARAMETERS, AND SPECTRA FROM THE SDSS-III/APOGEE SURVEY , 2015, 1501.04110.

[45]  Andreas Quirrenbach,et al.  Precise Radial Velocities of Giant Stars VII. Occurrence Rate of Giant Extrasolar Planets as a Function of Mass and Metallicity , 2014, 1412.4634.

[46]  J. Bovy galpy: A python LIBRARY FOR GALACTIC DYNAMICS , 2014, 1412.3451.

[47]  T. Beers,et al.  THE APOKASC CATALOG: AN ASTEROSEISMIC AND SPECTROSCOPIC JOINT SURVEY OF TARGETS IN THE KEPLER FIELDS , 2014, 1410.2503.

[48]  Marshall C. Johnson,et al.  A MISALIGNED PROGRADE ORBIT FOR KEPLER-13 Ab VIA DOPPLER TOMOGRAPHY , 2014, 1406.0512.

[49]  B. Jackson,et al.  POET: A Model for Planetary Orbital Evolution Due to Tides on Evolving Stars , 2014, 1405.1050.

[50]  A. Vigan,et al.  The VAST Survey - III. The multiplicity of A-type stars within 75 pc , 2013, 1311.7141.

[51]  R. G. West,et al.  Transiting hot Jupiters from WASP-South, Euler and TRAPPIST : WASP-95b to WASP-101b , 2013, 1310.5630.

[52]  Keivan G. Stassun,et al.  KELT-6b: A P ∼ 7.9 DAY HOT SATURN TRANSITING A METAL-POOR STAR WITH A LONG-PERIOD COMPANION , 2013, 1308.2296.

[53]  Eric B. Bechter,et al.  WASP-12b AND HAT-P-8b ARE MEMBERS OF TRIPLE STAR SYSTEMS , 2013, 1307.6857.

[54]  John F. Kielkopf,et al.  AstroImageJ: ImageJ for Astronomy , 2013 .

[55]  E. Mamajek,et al.  INTRINSIC COLORS, TEMPERATURES, AND BOLOMETRIC CORRECTIONS OF PRE-MAIN-SEQUENCE STARS , 2013, 1307.2657.

[56]  J. Winn,et al.  EVIDENCE FOR THE TIDAL DESTRUCTION OF HOT JUPITERS BY SUBGIANT STARS , 2013, 1306.0567.

[57]  Eric L. N. Jensen,et al.  Tapir: A web interface for transit/eclipse observability , 2013 .

[58]  R. Dawson,et al.  GIANT PLANETS ORBITING METAL-RICH STARS SHOW SIGNATURES OF PLANET–PLANET INTERACTIONS , 2013, 1302.6244.

[59]  Keivan G. Stassun,et al.  KELT-3b: A HOT JUPITER TRANSITING A V = 9.8 LATE-F STAR , 2012, 1211.1031.

[60]  T. Morton,et al.  RETIRED A STARS: THE EFFECT OF STELLAR EVOLUTION ON THE MASS ESTIMATES OF SUBGIANTS , 2012, 1208.4377.

[61]  B. Scott Gaudi,et al.  EXOFAST: A Fast Exoplanetary Fitting Suite in IDL , 2012, 1206.5798.

[62]  J. Crepp,et al.  THE TRENDS HIGH-CONTRAST IMAGING SURVEY. I. THREE BENCHMARK M DWARFS ORBITING SOLAR-TYPE STARS , 2012, 1210.3000.

[63]  A. Santerne,et al.  SOPHIE velocimetry of Kepler transit candidates , VI. An additional companion in the KOI-13 system , 2012, 1207.1715.

[64]  Antonino Francesco Lanza,et al.  Doppler tomography of transiting exoplanets: a prograde, low-inclined orbit for the hot Jupiter CoRoT-11b , 2012, 1206.4037.

[65]  W. Farr,et al.  ON THE FORMATION OF HOT JUPITERS IN STELLAR BINARIES , 2012, 1206.3529.

[66]  J. Pepper,et al.  KELT-1b: A STRONGLY IRRADIATED, HIGHLY INFLATED, SHORT PERIOD, 27 JUPITER-MASS COMPANION TRANSITING A MID-F STAR , 2012, 1206.1635.

[67]  V. Adibekyan,et al.  Overabundance of alpha-elements in exoplanet host stars , 2012, 1205.6670.

[68]  Keivan Stassun,et al.  The KELT-South Telescope , 2012, 1202.1826.

[69]  William F. Welsh,et al.  DETECTION OF KOI-13.01 USING THE PHOTOMETRIC ORBIT , 2011, 1110.3510.

[70]  Jason T. Wright,et al.  RETIRED A STARS AND THEIR COMPANIONS. VII. 18 NEW JOVIAN PLANETS , 2011, 1108.4205.

[71]  J. Lloyd “RETIRED” PLANET HOSTS: NOT SO MASSIVE, MAYBE JUST PORTLY AFTER LUNCH , 2011, 1108.1190.

[72]  H. Lehmann,et al.  ASYMMETRIC TRANSIT CURVES AS INDICATION OF ORBITAL OBLIQUITY: CLUES FROM THE LATE-TYPE DWARF COMPANION IN KOI-13 , 2011, 1105.2524.

[73]  U. Munari,et al.  Local stellar kinematics from RAVE data - I. Local standard of rest , 2010, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

[74]  Cambridge,et al.  HAT-P-25b: A HOT-JUPITER TRANSITING A MODERATELY FAINT G STAR , 2010, 1008.3565.

[75]  L. Iorio Classical and relativistic node precessional effects in WASP-33b and perspectives for detecting them , 2010, 1006.2707.

[76]  Douglas P. Finkbeiner,et al.  MEASURING REDDENING WITH SLOAN DIGITAL SKY SURVEY STELLAR SPECTRA AND RECALIBRATING SFD , 2010, 1012.4804.

[77]  B. Macintosh,et al.  Images of a fourth planet orbiting HR 8799 , 2010, Nature.

[78]  P. Gondoin,et al.  Transiting exoplanets from the CoRoT space mission - XIV. CoRoT-11b: a transiting massive “hot-Jupiter” in a prograde orbit around a rapidly rotating F-type star , 2010, 1009.2597.

[79]  C. Fabricius,et al.  Gaia broad band photometry , 2010, 1008.0815.

[80]  John Asher Johnson,et al.  HOT STARS WITH HOT JUPITERS HAVE HIGH OBLIQUITIES , 2010, 1006.4161.

[81]  A. Boccaletti,et al.  A Giant Planet Imaged in the Disk of the Young Star β Pictoris , 2010, Science.

[82]  K. Schlaufman,et al.  EVIDENCE OF POSSIBLE SPIN–ORBIT MISALIGNMENT ALONG THE LINE OF SIGHT IN TRANSITING EXOPLANET SYSTEMS , 2010, 1006.2851.

[83]  B. Scott Gaudi,et al.  Achieving Better Than 1 Minute Accuracy in the Heliocentric and Barycentric Julian Dates , 2010, 1005.4415.

[84]  G. Furesz,et al.  HAT-P-16b: A 4 MJ PLANET TRANSITING A BRIGHT STAR ON AN ECCENTRIC ORBIT, , 2010, 1005.2009.

[85]  Howard Isaacson,et al.  Kepler Planet-Detection Mission: Introduction and First Results , 2010, Science.

[86]  Robert Barkhouser,et al.  The Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) , 2007, Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation.

[87]  Russel J. White,et al.  A SURVEY OF STELLAR FAMILIES: MULTIPLICITY OF SOLAR-TYPE STARS , 2009, 1007.0414.

[88]  Joshua N. Winn,et al.  PARAMETER ESTIMATION FROM TIME-SERIES DATA WITH CORRELATED ERRORS: A WAVELET-BASED METHOD AND ITS APPLICATION TO TRANSIT LIGHT CURVES , 2009, 0909.0747.

[89]  A. Gimenez,et al.  Accurate masses and radii of normal stars: modern results and applications , 2009, 0908.2624.

[90]  B. Skiff,et al.  VizieR Online Data Catalog , 2009 .

[91]  Institute for Astronomy,et al.  Luminosity and surface brightness distribution of K-band galaxies from the UKIDSS Large Area Survey , 2008, 0806.0343.

[92]  B. Macintosh,et al.  Direct Imaging of Multiple Planets Orbiting the Star HR 8799 , 2008, Science.

[93]  S. Tremaine,et al.  Submitted to ApJ Preprint typeset using L ATEX style emulateapj v. 10/09/06 SHRINKING BINARY AND PLANETARY ORBITS BY KOZAI CYCLES WITH TIDAL FRICTION , 2022 .

[94]  Richard W. Pogge,et al.  The Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (KELT): A Small Robotic Telescope for Large‐Area Synoptic Surveys , 2007, 0704.0460.

[95]  I. Paris,et al.  Rotational velocities of A-type stars. III. Velocity distributions , 2006, astro-ph/0610785.

[96]  Walter A. Siegmund,et al.  # 2006. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A. THE 2.5 m TELESCOPE OF THE SLOAN DIGITAL SKY SURVEY , 2005 .

[97]  A. Robin,et al.  Modelling the Galactic Interstellar Extinction Distribution in Three Dimensions , 2005, astro-ph/0604427.

[98]  E. Hatziminaoglou,et al.  Star counts in the Galaxy - Simulating from very deep to very shallow photometric surveys with the TRILEGAL code , 2005, astro-ph/0504047.

[99]  J. Valenti,et al.  The Planet-Metallicity Correlation , 2005 .

[100]  Jong-Hak Woo,et al.  Y2 Isochrones with an Improved Core Overshoot Treatment , 2004 .

[101]  Thomas Bensby,et al.  Elemental abundance trends in the Galactic thin and thick disks as traced by nearby F and G dwarf stars , 2003 .

[102]  A. Robin,et al.  A synthetic view on structure and evolution of the Milky Way , 2003, astro-ph/0401052.

[103]  J. Binney,et al.  Radial mixing in galactic discs , 2002, astro-ph/0203510.

[104]  D. Schlegel,et al.  Maps of Dust Infrared Emission for Use in Estimation of Reddening and Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation Foregrounds , 1998 .

[105]  Andrew Collier Cameron,et al.  Spectropolarimetric observations of active stars , 1997 .

[106]  P. Bodenheimer,et al.  Orbital migration of the planetary companion of 51 Pegasi to its present location , 1996, Nature.

[107]  Phillip J. MacQueen,et al.  THE HIGH-RESOLUTION CROSS-DISPERSED ECHELLE WHITE PUPIL SPECTROMETER OF THE MCDONALD OBSERVATORY 2.7-M TELESCOPE , 1995 .

[108]  J. Gathright,et al.  Nonparametric statistical modeling of binary star separations , 1994 .

[109]  M. Colless Book Review: The Stellar Populations of Galaxies, ed. by B. Barbuy & A. Renzini (Kluwer, Dordrecht), 1992. , 1993 .

[110]  Robert L. Kurucz,et al.  Model Atmospheres for Population Synthesis , 1992 .

[111]  David R. Soderblom,et al.  Calculating Galactic Space Velocities and Their Uncertainties, with an Application to the Ursa Major Group , 1987 .

[112]  R. Kurucz Model atmospheres for G, F, A, B, and O stars , 1979 .

[113]  R. P. Kraft,et al.  STUDIES OF STELLAR ROTATION. V. THE DEPENDENCE OF ROTATION ON AGE AMONG SOLAR-TYPE STARS. , 1967 .

[114]  D. B. McLaughlin Some results of a spectrographic study of the Algol system. , 1924 .

[115]  R. A. Rossiter On the detection of an effect of rotation during eclipse in the velocity of the brigher component of beta Lyrae, and on the constancy of velocity of this system. , 1924 .