Context. Despite being a prominent subset of the exoplanet population discovered in the past three decades, the nature and provenance of sub-Neptune-sized planets is still one of the open questions in exoplanet science.Aims. For planets orbiting bright stars, precisely measuring the orbital and planet parameters of the system is the best approach to distinguish between competing theories regarding their formation and evolution.Methods. We obtained 69 new radial velocity observations of the mid-M dwarf G 9-40 with the CARMENES instrument to measure for the first time the mass of its transiting sub-Neptune planet, G 9-40 b, discovered in data from the K2 mission.Results. Combined with new observations from the TESS mission during Sectors 44, 45, and 46, we are able to measure the radius of the planet to an uncertainty of 3.4% (R-b = 1.900 +/- 0.065 R-circle plus) and determine its mass with a precision of 16% (M-b = 4.00 +/- 0.63 M-circle plus). The resulting bulk density of the planet is inconsistent with a terrestrial composition and suggests the presence of either a water-rich core or a significant hydrogen-rich envelope.Conclusions. G 9-40 b is referred to as a keystone planet due to its location in period-radius space within the radius valley. Several theories offer explanations for the origin and properties of this population and this planet is a valuable target for testing the dependence of those models on stellar host mass. By virtue of its brightness and small size of the host, it joins L 98-59 d as one of the two best warm (T-eq similar to 400 K) sub-Neptunes for atmospheric characterization with JWST, which will probe cloud formation in sub-Neptune-sized planets and break the degeneracies of internal composition models.

Precise mass determination for the keystone sub-Neptune planet transiting the mid-type M dwarf G 9-40

D. Gandolfi;E. Goffo;L. M. Serrano;
2022-01-01

Abstract

Context. Despite being a prominent subset of the exoplanet population discovered in the past three decades, the nature and provenance of sub-Neptune-sized planets is still one of the open questions in exoplanet science.Aims. For planets orbiting bright stars, precisely measuring the orbital and planet parameters of the system is the best approach to distinguish between competing theories regarding their formation and evolution.Methods. We obtained 69 new radial velocity observations of the mid-M dwarf G 9-40 with the CARMENES instrument to measure for the first time the mass of its transiting sub-Neptune planet, G 9-40 b, discovered in data from the K2 mission.Results. Combined with new observations from the TESS mission during Sectors 44, 45, and 46, we are able to measure the radius of the planet to an uncertainty of 3.4% (R-b = 1.900 +/- 0.065 R-circle plus) and determine its mass with a precision of 16% (M-b = 4.00 +/- 0.63 M-circle plus). The resulting bulk density of the planet is inconsistent with a terrestrial composition and suggests the presence of either a water-rich core or a significant hydrogen-rich envelope.Conclusions. G 9-40 b is referred to as a keystone planet due to its location in period-radius space within the radius valley. Several theories offer explanations for the origin and properties of this population and this planet is a valuable target for testing the dependence of those models on stellar host mass. By virtue of its brightness and small size of the host, it joins L 98-59 d as one of the two best warm (T-eq similar to 400 K) sub-Neptunes for atmospheric characterization with JWST, which will probe cloud formation in sub-Neptune-sized planets and break the degeneracies of internal composition models.
2022
666
1
15
https://www.aanda.org/articles/aa/full_html/2022/10/aa44426-22/aa44426-22.html
planetary systems; techniques: photometric; techniques: radial velocities; stars: low-mass; stars: individual: G 9-40
R. Luque; G. Nowak; T. Hirano; D. Kossakowski; E. Pall??; M. C. Nixon; G. Morello; P. J. Amado; S. H. Albrecht; J. A. Caballero; C. Cifuentes; W. D. Cochran; H. J. Deeg; S. Dreizler; E. Esparza-Borges; A. Fukui; D. Gandolfi; E. Goffo; E. W. Guenther; A. P. Hatzes; T. Henning; P. Kabath; K. Kawauchi; J. Korth; T. Kotani; T. Kudo; M. Kuzuhara; M. Lafarga; K. W. F. Lam; J. Livingston; J. C. Morales; A. Muresan; F. Murgas; N. Narita; H. L. M. Osborne; H. Parviainen; V. M. Passegger; C. M. Persson; A. Quirrenbach; S. Redfield; S. Reffert; A. Reiners; I. Ribas; L. M. Serrano; M. Tamura; V. Van Eylen; N. Watanabe; M. R. Zapatero Osorio
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1948622
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