J/AcA/70/181      Search for Planets in Hot Jupiter Systems (Maciejewski+, 2020)
Search for Planets in Hot Jupiter Systems with Multi-Sector TESS Photometry.
I. No Companions in Planetary Systems KELT-18, KELT-23, KELT-24, Qatar-8,
WASP-62, WASP-100, WASP-119, and WASP-126.
    Maciejewski G.
    <Acta Astron. 70, 181-202 (2020)>
    =2020AcA....70..181M 2020AcA....70..181M        (SIMBAD/NED BibCode)
ADC_Keywords: Stars, double and multiple ; Exoplanets ; Photometry
Keywords: stars: individual: KELT-18, KELT-23, KELT-24, Qatar-8, WASP-62,
          WASP-100, WASP-119, WASP-126 -
          planets and satellites: individual: KELT-18 b, KELT-23 b, KELT-24 b,
          Qatar-8 b, WASP-62 b, WASP-100 b, WASP-119 b, WASP-126 b
Abstract:
    Origins of giant planets on tight orbits, so called hot Jupiters, are
    a long-lasting question in the planetary formation and evolution
    theory. The answer seems to be hidden in architectures of those
    systems that remain only partially understood. Using multi-sector
    time-series photometry from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite,
    we searched for additional planets in the KELT-18, KELT-23, KELT-24,
    Qatar-8, WASP-62, WASP-100, WASP-119, and WASP-126 planetary systems
    using both the transit technique and transit timing method. Our
    homogeneous analysis has eliminated the presence of transiting
    companions down to the terrestrial-size regime in the KELT-23 and
    WASP-62 systems, and down to mini-Neptunes or Neptunes in the
    remaining ones.
    Transit timing analysis has revealed no sign of either long-term
    trends or periodic perturbations for all the studied hot Jupiters,
    including the WASP-126 b for which deviations from a Keplerian model
    were claimed in the literature. The loneliness of the planets of the
    sample speaks in favor of the high-eccentricity migration mechanism
    that probably brought them to their tight orbits observed nowadays. As
    a by-product of our study, the transit light curve parameters were
    redetermined with a substantial improvement of the precision for six
    systems. For KELT-24 b, a joint analysis allowed us to place a tighter
    constraint on its orbital eccentricity.
Description:
    This is machine-readable Table 3 of the source paper, providing
    homogeneously determined transit mid-points for the examined planets:
    KELT-18 b, KELT-23 b, KELT-24 b, Qatar-8 b, WASP-62b , WASP-100 b,
    WASP-119 b, and WASP-126 b.
Objects:
    --------------------------------------------------------------
       RA   (2000)   DE        Designation(s)
    --------------------------------------------------------------
    14 26 05.76  +59 26 39.3   KELT-18  = BD+60 1538
    15 28 35.19  +66 21 31.5   KELT-23  = BD+66 911
    10 47 38.35  +71 39 21.2   KELT-24  = HD 93148
    10 29 39.11  +70 31 37.6   Qatar-8  = TYC 4387-1050-1
    05 48 33.59  -63 59 18.4   WASP-62  = CPD-64 484
    04 35 50.33  -64 01 37.3   WASP-100 = CPD-64 356
    03 43 44.02  -65 11 37.9   WASP-119 = 2MASS 03434402-6511378
    04 13 29.75  -69 13 36.6   WASP-126 = TYC 9153-833-1
    --------------------------------------------------------------
File Summary:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 FileName      Lrecl  Records   Explanations
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ReadMe            80        .   This file
tt.dat            69      480   Transit mid-points
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
See also:
 J/AJ/153/263     : Transiting planetary system KELT-18 (McLeod+, 2017)
 J/AJ/158/78      : Transiting planetary system KELT-23 (Johns+, 2019)
 J/AJ/158/197     : Transiting planetary system KELT-24 (Rodriguez+, 2019)
 J/AJ/157/224     : Transiting planetary system Qatar-8 (Alsubai+, 2019)
 J/MNRAS/426/739  : Transiting planetary system WASP-62 (Hellier+, 2012)
 J/MNRAS/440/1982 : Transiting planetary system WASP-100 (Hellier+, 2014)
 J/A+A/591/55     : Planetary systems WASP-119 and WASP-126 (Maxted+, 2016)
 J/A+A/631/A76    : MASCARA-3b radial and light curves (Hjorth+, 2019)
Byte-by-byte Description of file: tt.dat
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   Bytes Format Units   Label     Explanations
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   1- 10  A10   ---     Planet    Planet name
  13- 15  I3    ---     Ep        Epoch
  17- 27  F11.6 d       BJD       Mid-transit time (1)
  29- 36  F8.6  d     e_BJD       Positive error for BJD
  38- 45  F8.6  d     E_BJD       Negative error for BJD
  47- 69  A23   ---     Datasrc   Data source (2)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note (1): Barycentric Julian date in Barycentric Dynamical Time (BJD_TDB)
Note (2): Data source as follows:
  Alsubai et al. (2019)   = Alsubai et al., 2019, Cat. J/AJ/157/224
  Hellier et al. (2012)   = Hellier et al., 2012, Cat. J/MNRAS/426/739
  Hellier et al. (2014)   = Hellier et al., 2014, Cat. J/MNRAS/440/1982
  Hjorth et al. (2019)    = Hjorth et al., 2019, Cat. J/A+A/631/A76
  Johns et al. (2019)     = Johns et al., 2019, Cat. J/AJ/158/78
  Maxted et al. (2016)    = Maxted et al., 2016, Cat. J/A+A/591/55
  McLeod et al. (2017)    = McLeod et al., 2017, Cat. J/AJ/153/263
  Rodriguez et al. (2019) = Rodriguez et al., 2019, J/AJ/158/197
  This paper              = This paper
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Acknowledgements:
    Gracjan Maciejewski, gmac(at)umk.pl
        Institute of Astronomy, Nicolaus Copernicus University, Poland
(End) Gracjan Maciejewski [Copernicus Univ.], Patricia Vannier [CDS] 25-Mar-2021