We present a detailed analysis of HARPS-N radial velocity observations of K2-100, a young and active star in the Praesepe cluster, which hosts a transiting planet with a period of 1.7 d. We model the activity-induced radial velocity variations of the host star with a multidimensional Gaussian Process framework and detect a planetary signal of 10.6 ± 3.0 m s−1, which matches the transit ephemeris, and translates to a planet mass of 21.8 ± 6.2 M. We perform a suite of validation tests to confirm that our detected signal is genuine. This is the first mass measurement for a transiting planet in a young open cluster. The relatively low density of the planet, 2.04+−006661 g cm−3, implies that K2-100b retains a significant volatile envelope. We estimate that the planet is losing its atmosphere at a rate of 1011–1012 g s−1 due to the high level of radiation it receives from its host star.

Radial velocity confirmation of K2-100b: A young, highly irradiated, and low-density transiting hot Neptune

Gandolfi D.;
2019-01-01

Abstract

We present a detailed analysis of HARPS-N radial velocity observations of K2-100, a young and active star in the Praesepe cluster, which hosts a transiting planet with a period of 1.7 d. We model the activity-induced radial velocity variations of the host star with a multidimensional Gaussian Process framework and detect a planetary signal of 10.6 ± 3.0 m s−1, which matches the transit ephemeris, and translates to a planet mass of 21.8 ± 6.2 M. We perform a suite of validation tests to confirm that our detected signal is genuine. This is the first mass measurement for a transiting planet in a young open cluster. The relatively low density of the planet, 2.04+−006661 g cm−3, implies that K2-100b retains a significant volatile envelope. We estimate that the planet is losing its atmosphere at a rate of 1011–1012 g s−1 due to the high level of radiation it receives from its host star.
2019
490
1
698
708
https://academic.oup.com/mnras/article/490/1/698/5569669
Planets and satellites: individual: K2-100b; Techniques: photometric; Techniques: radial velocities
Barragan O.; Aigrain S.; Kubyshkina D.; Gandolfi D.; Livingston J.; Fridlund M.C.V.; Fossati L.; Korth J.; Parviainen H.; Malavolta L.; Palle E.; Deeg H.J.; Nowak G.; Rajpaul V.M.; Zicher N.; Antoniciello G.; Narita N.; Albrecht S.; Bedin L.R.; Cabrera J.; Cochran W.D.; De Leon J.; Eigmuller P.; Fukui A.; Granata V.; Grziwa S.; Guenther E.; Hatzes A.P.; Kusakabe N.; Latham D.W.; Libralato M.; Luque R.; Montanes-Rodriguez P.; Murgas F.; Nardiello D.; Pagano I.; Piotto G.; Persson C.M.; Redfield S.; Tamura M.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1731241
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