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Submit a new article| An orbital period of 0.94days for the hot-Jupiter planet WASP-18b The `hot Jupiters' that abound in lists of known extrasolar planets arethought to have formed far from their host stars, but migrate inwardsthrough interactions with the proto-planetary disk from which they wereborn, or by an alternative mechanism such as planet-planet scattering.The hot Jupiters closest to their parent stars, at orbital distances ofonly ~0.02 astronomical units, have strong tidal interactions, andsystems such as OGLE-TR-56 have been suggested as tests of tidaldissipation theory. Here we report the discovery of planet WASP-18b withan orbital period of 0.94days and a mass of ten Jupiter masses(10MJup), resulting in a tidal interaction an order ofmagnitude stronger than that of planet OGLE-TR-56b. Under the assumptionthat the tidal-dissipation parameter Q of the host star is of the orderof 106, as measured for Solar System bodies and binary starsand as often applied to extrasolar planets, WASP-18b will be spirallinginwards on a timescale less than a thousandth that of the lifetime ofits host star. Therefore either WASP-18 is in a rare, exceptionallyshort-lived state, or the tidal dissipation in this system (and possiblyother hot-Jupiter systems) must be much weaker than in the Solar System.
 
 
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| Constellation: | Phoenix |  | Right ascension: | 01h37m25.03s |  | Declination: | -45°40'40.4" |  | Apparent magnitude: | 9.312 |  | Proper motion RA: | 27.8 |  | Proper motion Dec: | 18.9 |  | B-T magnitude: | 9.854 |  | V-T magnitude: | 9.357 |  Catalogs and designations:
 
 
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