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WASP-161
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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WASP-161, also named Tislit, is an F-type main-sequence star about 1,162 light-years (356 parsecs) away in the constellation Puppis. With an apparent magnitude of 11.1, it is much too faint to be visible to the naked eye. It hosts one known exoplanet.
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Nomenclature
The designation WASP-161 comes from the Wide Angle Search for Planets.
This was one of the systems selected to be named in the 2019 NameExoWorlds campaign during the 100th anniversary of the IAU, which assigned each country a star and planet to be named. This system was assigned to Morocco; it was chosen because it hosts the first exoplanet with a discovery team led by a Moroccan astronomer.[6] The approved names were Tislit for the star and Isli for the planet; they are named after the Tislit and Isli lakes in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco, near Imilchil. The names mean bride and groom in the Amazigh language, in reference to a heartbroken couple of local legend.[7][8]
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Planetary system
The planet WASP-161b, later named Isli, is a massive hot Jupiter, discovered using the transit method as part of the Wide Angle Search for Planets (WASP).[4] The discovery team, led by Khalid Barkaoui of Cadi Ayyad University, used other telescopes, including TRAPPIST-North at the Oukaïmeden Observatory, TRAPPIST-South, and SPECULOOS-South, to confirm the planet initially detected by WASP.[6] The discovery was announced in 2018 along with two other planets, around the stars WASP-163 and WASP-170.[4]
A 2022 study reported evidence for transit-timing variations of WASP-161b, possibly due to orbital decay or precession,[9][10] but this was not confirmed by a subsequent study in 2023.[11]
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References
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