TI-DYE. II. HIP 67522 light curves & transit data Virtual Observatory Resource

Authors
  1. Barber M.G.
  2. Thao Pa C.
  3. Mann A.W.
  4. Vanderburg A.
  5. Mori M.,Livingston J.H.
  6. Fukui A.
  7. Narita N.
  8. Kraus A.L.
  9. Tofflemire B.M.,Newton E.R.
  10. Winn J.N.
  11. Jenkins J.M.
  12. Seager S.
  13. Collins K.A.,Twicken J.D.
  14. Published by
    CDS
Abstract

The youngest (<50Myr) planets are vital to understand planet formation and early evolution. The 17 Myr system HIP 67522 is already known to host a giant (~10R_{Earth}_) planet on a tight orbit. In their discovery paper, Rizzuto et al. reported a tentative single-transit detection of an additional planet in the system using TESS. Here, we report the discovery of HIP 67522c, a 7.9R_{Earth}_ planet that matches with that single-transit event. We confirm the signal with ground-based multiwavelength photometry from Sinistro and MuSCAT4. At a period of 14.33days, planet c is close to a 2:1 mean-motion resonance with b (6.96days or 2.06:1). The light curve shows distortions during many of the transits, which are consistent with spot-crossing events and/or flares. Fewer stellar activity events are seen in the transits of planet b, suggesting that planet c is crossing a more active latitude. Such distortions, combined with systematics in the TESS light-curve extraction, likely explain why planet c was previously missed.

Keywords
  1. exoplanets
  2. infrared-photometry
  3. visible-astronomy
  4. young-stellar-objects
Bibliographic source Bibcode
2024ApJ...973L..30B
See also HTML
https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/ApJ/973/L30
IVOA Identifier IVOID
ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/973/L30

Access

Web browser access HTML
https://vizier.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/VizieR-2?-source=J/ApJ/973/L30
https://vizier.iucaa.in/viz-bin/VizieR-2?-source=J/ApJ/973/L30
http://vizieridia.saao.ac.za/viz-bin/VizieR-2?-source=J/ApJ/973/L30
IVOA Table Access TAP
https://tapvizier.cds.unistra.fr/TAPVizieR/tap
Run SQL-like queries with TAP-enabled clients (e.g., TOPCAT).

History

2026-04-15T14:59:15Z
Resource record created
2026-04-15T14:59:15Z
Created
2026-05-04T07:43:19Z
Updated

Contact

Name
CDS support team
Postal Address
CDS, Observatoire de Strasbourg, 11 rue de l'Universite, F-67000 Strasbourg, France
E-Mail
cds-question@unistra.fr