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TESS discovery of a sub-Neptune orbiting a mid-M dwarf TOI-2136

Authors :
Gan, Tianjun
Soubkiou, Abderahmane
Wang, Sharon X.
Benkhaldoun, Zouhair
Mao, Shude
Artigau, Étienne
Fouqué, Pascal
Giacalone, Steven
Theissen, Christopher A.
Aganze, Christian
Collins, Karen A.
Shporer, Avi
Barkaoui, Khalid
Ghachoui, Mourad
Howell, Steve B.
Lamman, Claire
Demangeon, Olivier D. S.
Burdanov, Artem
Cadieux, Charles
Chouqar, Jamila
Collins, Kevin I.
Cook, Neil J.
Delrez, Laetitia
Demory, Brice-Olivier
Doyon, René
Dransfield, Georgina
Dressing, Courtney D.
Ducrot, Elsa
Fan, Jiahao
Garcia, Lionel
Gill, Holden
Gillon, Michaël
Gnilka, Crystal L.
Chew, Yilen Gómez Maqueo
Günther, Maximilian N.
Henze, Christopher E.
Huang, Chelsea X.
Jehin, Emmanuel
Jensen, Eric L. N.
Lin, Zitao
McCormac, James
Murray, Catriona A.
Niraula, Prajwal
Pedersen, Peter P.
Pozuelos, Francisco J.
Queloz, Didier
Rackham, Benjamin V.
Savel, Arjun B.
Schanche, Nicole
Schwarz, Richard P.
Sebastian, Daniel
Thompson, Samantha
Timmermans, Mathilde
Triaud, Amaury H. M. J.
Vezie, Michael
Wells, Robert D.
de Wit, Julien
Ricker, George R.
Vanderspek, Roland
Latham, David W.
Seager, Sara
Winn, Joshua N.
Jenkins, Jon M.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We present the discovery of TOI-2136b, a sub-Neptune planet transiting every 7.85 days a nearby M4.5V-type star, identified through photometric measurements from the TESS mission. The host star is located $33$ pc away with a radius of $R_{\ast} = 0.34\pm0.02\ R_{\odot}$, a mass of $0.34\pm0.02\ M_{\odot}$ and an effective temperature of $\rm 3342\pm100\ K$. We estimate its stellar rotation period to be $75\pm5$ days based on archival long-term photometry. We confirm and characterize the planet based on a series of ground-based multi-wavelength photometry, high-angular-resolution imaging observations, and precise radial velocities from CFHT/SPIRou. Our joint analysis reveals that the planet has a radius of $2.19\pm0.17\ R_{\oplus}$, and a mass measurement of $6.4\pm2.4\ M_{\oplus}$. The mass and radius of TOI2136b is consistent with a broad range of compositions, from water-ice to gas-dominated worlds. TOI-2136b falls close to the radius valley for low-mass stars predicted by the thermally driven atmospheric mass loss models, making it an interesting target for future studies of its interior structure and atmospheric properties.<br />Comment: 19 pages, 15 figures, submitted to MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2202.10024
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stac1448