HAT-P-19 is a K-type main-sequence star about 658 light-years away. The star is old yet metal enriched, having amount of heavy elements 250% of solar abundance.[4] The survey in 2012 have failed to find any stellar companions to HAT-P-19.[6]
Planetary system
In 2010 a transiting hot Saturn-sized planet was detected.[2] Its equilibrium temperature is 984±10 K,[7] and it is grey in color.[8]
^ abcHartman, J. D.; Bakos, G. Á.; Sato, B.; Torres, G.; Noyes, R. W.; Latham, D. W.; Kovács, G.; Fischer, D. A.; Howard, A. W.; Johnson, J. A.; Marcy, G. W.; Buchhave, L. A.; Füresz, G.; Perumpilly, G.; Béky, B.; Stefanik, R. P.; Sasselov, D. D.; Esquerdo, G. A.; Everett, M.; Csubry, Z.; Lázár, J.; Papp, I.; Sári, P. (2010), "HAT-P-18b and HAT-P-19b: Two Low-Density Saturn-Mass Planets Transiting Metal-Rich K Stars", The Astrophysical Journal, 726: 52, arXiv:1007.4850, doi:10.1088/0004-637X/726/1/52, S2CID10896305
^ abBasturk, Ozgur; Yalcinkaya, Selcuk; Esmer, Ekrem M.; Tanriverdi, Taner; Keten, Burak (2019), A Holistic and Probabilistic Approach to the Ground-based Data of HAT-P-19 System, arXiv:1911.07903, doi:10.1093/mnras/staa1758, S2CID208158330
^Mallonn, M.; von Essen, C.; Weingrill, J.; Strassmeier, K. G.; Ribas, I.; Carroll, T. A.; Herrero, E.; Granzer, T.; Claret, A.; Schwope, A. (2015), "Transmission spectroscopy of the inflated exo-Saturn HAT-P-19b", Astronomy & Astrophysics, 580: A60, arXiv:1506.05685, Bibcode:2015A&A...580A..60M, doi:10.1051/0004-6361/201423778, S2CID91175943
^Seeliger, M.; Kitze, M.; Errmann, R.; Richter, S.; Ohlert, J. M.; Chen, W. P.; Guo, J. K.; Göğüş, E.; Güver, T.; Aydın, B.; Mottola, S.; Hellmich, S.; Fernandez, M.; Aceituno, F. J.; Dimitrov, D.; Kjurkchieva, D.; Jensen, E.; Cohen, D.; Kundra, E.; Pribulla, T.; Vaňko, M.; Budaj, J.; Mallonn, M.; Wu, Z.-Y.; Zhou, X.; Raetz, St.; Adam, C.; Schmidt, T. O. B.; Ide, A.; et al. (2015), "Ground-based transit observations of the HAT-P-18, HAT-P-19, HAT-P-27/WASP40 and WASP-21 systems", Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 451 (4): 4060–4072, arXiv:1508.06215, doi:10.1093/mnras/stv1187, S2CID56034663
^MacIejewski, G.; Stangret, M.; Ohlert, J.; Basaran, Ç.S.; MacIejczak, J.; Puciata-Mroczynska, M.; Boulanger, E. (2018), "New transit timing observations for GJ 436 b, HAT-P-3 b, HAT-P-19 b, WASP-3 b, and XO-2 B", Information Bulletin on Variable Stars, 6243 (6243): 1, arXiv:1808.03306, Bibcode:2018IBVS.6243....1M, doi:10.22444/IBVS.6243, S2CID118872603