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Dr. Rabus, Markus
Nombre de publicaciĂ³n
Dr. Rabus, Markus
Nombre completo
Rabus, Markus
Facultad
Email
mrabus@ucsc.cl
ORCID
1 results
Research Outputs
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- PublicationGiant outer transiting exoplanet mass (GOT ’EM) survey. III. Recovery and confirmation of a temperate, mildly eccentric, single-transit Jupiter orbiting TOI-2010(IOP Publishing, 2023)
; ;Mann, Christopher ;Dalba, Paul ;Lafrenière, David ;Fulton, Benjamin ;Hébrard, Guillaume ;Boisse, Isabelle ;Dalal, Shweta ;Deleuil, Magali ;Delfosse, Xavier ;Demangeon, Olivier ;Forveille, Thierry ;Heidari, Neda ;Kiefer, Flavien ;Martioli, Eder ;Moutou, Claire ;Endl, Michael ;Cochran, William ;MacQueen, Phillip ;Marchis, Franck ;Dragomir, Diana ;Gupta, Arvind ;Feliz, Dax ;Nicholson, Belinda ;Ziegler, Carl ;Villanueva, Steven ;Rowe, Jason ;Talens, Geert Jan ;Thorngren, Daniel ;LaCourse, Daryll ;Jacobs, Tom ;Howard, Andrew ;Bieryla, Allyson ;Latham, David ;Fetherolf, Tara ;Hellier, Coel ;Howell, Steve ;Plavchan, Peter ;Reefe, Michael ;Combs, Deven ;Bowen, Michael ;Wittrock, Justin ;Ricker, George ;Seager, S. ;Winn, Joshua ;Jenkins, Jon ;Barclay, Thomas ;Watanabe, David ;Collins, Karen ;Eastman, JasonTing, EricLarge-scale exoplanet surveys like the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) mission are powerful tools for discovering large numbers of exoplanet candidates. Single-transit events are commonplace within the resulting candidate list due to the unavoidable limitation of the observing baseline. These single-transit planets often remain unverified due to their unknown orbital periods and consequent difficulty in scheduling follow-up observations. In some cases, radial velocity (RV) follow up can constrain the period enough to enable a future targeted transit detection. We present the confirmation of one such planet: TOI-2010 b. Nearly three years of RV coverage determined the period to a level where a broad window search could be undertaken with the Near-Earth Object Surveillance Satellite, detecting an additional transit. An additional detection in a much later TESS sector solidified our final parameter estimation. We find TOI-2010 b to be a Jovian planet (MP = 1.29 MJup, RP = 1.05 RJup) on a mildly eccentric orbit (e = 0.21) with a period of P = 141.83403 days. Assuming a simple model with no albedo and perfect heat redistribution, the equilibrium temperature ranges from about 360 to 450 K from apastron to periastron. Its wide orbit and bright host star (V = 9.85) make TOI-2010 b a valuable test bed for future lowinsolation atmospheric analysis.