KOI-13.01, a planet-sized companion in an optical double star was announced as one of the 1235 Kepler planet candidates in February 2011. The transit curves show significant distortion that was stable over the ∼130 days time-span of the data. Here we investigate the phenomenon via detailed analyses of the two components of the double star and a re-reduction of the Kepler data with pixel-level photometry. Our results indicate that KOI-13 is a common proper motion binary, with two rapidly rotating components (v sin i ≈65-70 km/s). We identify the host star of KOI-13.01 and conclude that the transit curve asymmetry is consistent with a companion orbiting a rapidly rotating, possibly elongated star on an oblique orbit. The radius of the transiter is 2.2 R J , implying an irradiated late-type dwarf, probably a hot brown dwarf rather than a planet. KOI-13 is the first example for detecting orbital obliquity for a substellar companion without measuring the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect with spectroscopy.
In this Letter we present observations of recent HAT-P-13b transits. The
combined analysis of published and newly obtained transit epochs shows evidence
for significant transit timing variations since the last publicly available
ephemerides. Variation of transit timings result in a sudden switch of transit
times. The detected full range of TTV spans ~0.015 days, which is significantly
more than the known TTV events exhibited by hot Jupiters. If we have detected a
periodic process, its period should be at least ~3 years because there are no
signs of variations in the previous observations. This argument makes unlikely
that the measured TTV is due to perturbations by HAT-P-13c.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS Letters (this
version contains an additional measurement that has been acquired since the
submission and acceptance of the paper, slightly polished since version 1).
Measurements confirming our results are welcome
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