Discovery | |
---|---|
Discovered by | KELT-North |
Discovery date | 7 June 2012 |
Transit | |
Orbital characteristics | |
0.5504 ± 0.00086 AU (82,339,000 ± 129,000 km) | |
Eccentricity | 0 |
4.1137913 ± 0.00001 d | |
Inclination | 88.56 ± 1.14 |
2455974.60338 ± 0.00083 | |
90 | |
Semi-amplitude | 161.1 ± 7.8 |
Star | KELT-2A |
Physical characteristics | |
1.290 ± 0.057[1] RJ | |
Mass | 1.524 ± 0.088[1] MJ |
Mean density | 0.940 ± 0.090 g/cm3[1] |
22.7 m/s2 (74 ft/s2) 2.3 g | |
Temperature | 1994±104 K or 1782±111 K[2] |
KELT-2Ab is an extrasolar planet that orbits the star KELT-2A approximately 440 light-years away in the constellation of Auriga.[1] It was discovered by the KELT-North survey via the transit method - so both its mass and radius are known quite precisely - in a paper led by Thomas Beatty. As of its discovery KELT-2Ab is the fifth-brightest transiting Hot Jupiter known that has a well constrained mass. This makes the KELT-2A system a promising target for future space- and ground-based follow-up observations to learn about the planet's atmosphere.[3]
The water vapour was detected in planetary atmosphere in 2018.[4]
The star KELT-2A is a member of the common-proper-motion binary star system KELT-2 (HD 42176). KELT-2B is an early K dwarf approximately 295 astronomical units away.
Beatty2012
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).