Title: WASP-20 is a close visual binary with a transiting hot Jupiter Author: Daniel Evans, John Southworth, Barry Smalley
We announce the discovery that WASP-20 is a binary stellar system, consisting of two components separated by 0.2578±0.0007" on the sky, with a flux ratio of 0.4639±0.0015 in the K-band. It has previously been assumed that the system consists of a single F9 V star, with photometric and radial velocity signals consistent with a low-density transiting giant planet. With a projected separation of approximately 60 au between the two components, the detected planetary signals almost certainly originate from the brighter of the two stars. We reanalyse previous observations allowing for two scenarios, `planet transits A' and `planet transits B', finding that both cases remain consistent with a transiting gas giant. However, we rule out the `planet transits B' scenario because the observed transit duration requires star B to be significantly evolved, and therefore have an age much greater than star A. We outline further observations which can be used to confirm this finding. Our preferred `planet transits A' scenario results in the measured mass and radius of the planet increasing by 4sigma and 1sigma, respectively.
Title: WASP-20b and WASP-28b: a hot Saturn and a hot Jupiter in near-aligned orbits around solar-type stars Author: D. R. Anderson, A. Collier Cameron, C. Hellier, M. Lendl, T. A. Lister, P. F. L. Maxted, D. Queloz, B. Smalley, A. M. Smith, A. H. M. J. Triaud, D. J. A. Brown, M. Gillon, M. Neveu-VanMalle, F. Pepe, D. Pollacco, D. Segransan, S. Udry, R. G. West, P. J. Wheatley
We report the discovery of the planets WASP-20b and WASP-28b along with measurements of their sky-projected orbital obliquities. WASP-20b is an inflated, Saturn-mass planet (0.31 MJup; 1.46 RJup) in a 4.9-day, near-aligned (=8.1±3.6) orbit around CD-24 102 (V=10.7; F9). WASP-28b is an inflated, Jupiter-mass planet (0.91 MJup; 1.21 RJup) in a 3.4-day, near-aligned (=8±18) orbit around a V=12, F8 star. As intermediate-mass planets in short orbits around aged, cool stars (7+21 Gyr for WASP-20 and 5+32 Gyr for WASP-28; both with Teff < 6250 K), their orbital alignment is consistent with the hypothesis that close-in giant planets are scattered into eccentric orbits with random alignments, which are then circularised and aligned with their stars' spins via tidal dissipation.