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TOI-908: a planet at the edge of the Neptune desert transiting a G-type star

Authors :
Hawthorn, Faith
Bayliss, Daniel
Armstrong, David J.
Fernández, Jorge Fernández
Osborn, Ares
Sousa, Sérgio G.
Adibekyan, Vardan
Davoult, Jeanne
Collins, Karen A.
Alibert, Yann
Barros, Susana C. C.
Bouchy, François
Brogi, Matteo
Ciardi, David R.
Daylan, Tansu
Mena, Elisa Delgado
Demangeon, Olivier D. S.
Díaz, Rodrigo F.
Gan, Tianjun
Horne, Keith
Hoyer, Sergio
Levine, Alan M.
Lillo-Box, Jorge
Nielsen, Louise D.
Osborn, Hugh P.
Ricker, George R.
Rodrigues, José
Santos, Nuno C.
Schwarz, Richard P.
Seager, Sara
Bell, Juan Serrano
Shporer, Avi
Stockdale, Chris
Strøm, Paul A.
Tenenbaum, Peter
Udry, Stéphane
Wheatley, Peter J.
Winn, Joshua N.
Ziegler, Carl
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

We present the discovery of an exoplanet transiting TOI-908 (TIC-350153977) using data from TESS sectors 1, 12, 13, 27, 28 and 39. TOI-908 is a T = 10.7 mag G-dwarf ($T_{eff}$ = 5626 $\pm$ 61 K) solar-like star with a mass of 0.950 $\pm$ 0.010 $M_{\odot}$ and a radius of 1.028 $\pm$ 0.030 $R_{\odot}$. The planet, TOI-908 b, is a 3.18 $\pm$ 0.16 $R_{\oplus}$ planet in a 3.18 day orbit. Radial velocity measurements from HARPS reveal TOI-908 b has a mass of approximately 16.1 $\pm$ 4.1 $M_{\oplus}$ , resulting in a bulk planetary density of 2.7+0.2-0.4 g cm-3. TOI-908 b lies in a sparsely-populated region of parameter space known as the Neptune desert. The planet likely began its life as a sub-Saturn planet before it experienced significant photoevaporation due to X-rays and extreme ultraviolet radiation from its host star, and is likely to continue evaporating, losing a significant fraction of its residual envelope mass.<br />Comment: 17 pages, 17 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2306.09758
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stad1840