http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/070502_supermassive_planet.html
Here is two things about the artice I found that contradicted each other.
Dubbed HAT-P-2b, the super-dense planet is the most massive known to transit across its parent star, but the weirdness doesn't stop there. Its oval orbit is so extreme that it first bakes the planet, and then cools it off during a trip that takes just over five days.
Every five hours and 15 hours - the time it takes the planet to complete a full trip around its star - HAT-P-2b crosses in front of its stellar parent, as seen from Earth, in what astronomers call a transit.
Can someone explain how this can defer? 5 days from the first quote and 15 hours for the second quote? Maybe just a typo?