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CoRoT-10b: a giant planet in a 13.24 day eccentric orbit

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arxiv 1006.2949 v1 pith:6MBLEWYZ submitted 2010-06-15 astro-ph.EP

CoRoT-10b: a giant planet in a 13.24 day eccentric orbit

classification astro-ph.EP
keywords corot-10bplaneteccentricorbitcorotderivegiantstar
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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The space telescope CoRoT searches for transiting extrasolar planets by continuously monitoring the optical flux of thousands of stars in several fields of view. We report the discovery of CoRoT-10b, a giant planet on a highly eccentric orbit (e=0.53 +/- 0.04) revolving in 13.24 days around a faint (V=15.22) metal-rich K1V star. We use CoRoT photometry, radial velocity observations taken with the HARPS spectrograph, and UVES spectra of the parent star to derive the orbital, stellar and planetary parameters. We derive a radius of the planet of 0.97 +/- 0.07 R_Jup and a mass of 2.75 +/- 0.16 M_Jup. The bulk density, rho_pl=3.70 +/- 0.83 g/cm^3, is ~2.8 that of Jupiter. The core of CoRoT-10b could contain up to 240 M_Earth of heavy elements. Moving along its eccentric orbit, the planet experiences a 10.6-fold variation in insolation. Owing to the long circularisation time, tau_circ > 7 Gyr, a resonant perturber is not required to excite and maintain the high eccentricity of CoRoT-10b.

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