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New Mass and Radius Constraints on the LHS 1140 Planets -- LHS 1140 b is Either a Temperate Mini-Neptune or a Water World

Authors :
Cadieux, Charles
Plotnykov, Mykhaylo
Doyon, René
Valencia, Diana
Jahandar, Farbod
Dang, Lisa
Turbet, Martin
Fauchez, Thomas J.
Cloutier, Ryan
Cherubim, Collin
Artigau, Étienne
Cook, Neil J.
Edwards, Billy
Hallatt, Tim
Charnay, Benjamin
Bouchy, François
Allart, Romain
Mignon, Lucile
Baron, Frédérique
Barros, Susana C. C.
Benneke, Björn
Martins, B. L. Canto
Cowan, Nicolas B.
De Medeiros, J. R.
Delfosse, Xavier
Delgado-Mena, Elisa
Dumusque, Xavier
Ehrenreich, David
Hara, Nathan C.
Lafrenière, David
Frensch, Yolanda G. C.
Hernández, J. I. González
Curto, Gaspare Lo
Malo, Lison
Melo, Claudio
Mounzer, Dany
Passeger, Vera Maria
Pepe, Francesco
Poulin-Girard, Anne-Sophie
Santos, Nuno C.
Sosnowska, Danuta
Mascareño, Alejandro Suárez
Thibault, Simon
Vaulato, Valentina
Wade, Gregg A.
Wildi, François
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The two-planet transiting system LHS 1140 has been extensively observed since its discovery in 2017, notably with $Spitzer$, HST, TESS, and ESPRESSO, placing strong constraints on the parameters of the M4.5 host star and its small temperate exoplanets, LHS 1140 b and c. Here, we reanalyse the ESPRESSO observations of LHS 1140 with the novel line-by-line framework designed to fully exploit the radial velocity content of a stellar spectrum while being resilient to outlier measurements. The improved radial velocities, combined with updated stellar parameters, consolidate our knowledge on the mass of LHS 1140 b (5.60$\pm$0.19 M$_{\oplus}$) and LHS 1140 c (1.91$\pm$0.06 M$_{\oplus}$) with unprecedented precision of 3%. Transits from $Spitzer$, HST, and TESS are jointly analysed for the first time, allowing us to refine the planetary radii of b (1.730$\pm$0.025 R$_{\oplus}$) and c (1.272$\pm$0.026 R$_{\oplus}$). Stellar abundance measurements of refractory elements (Fe, Mg and Si) obtained with NIRPS are used to constrain the internal structure of LHS 1140 b. This planet is unlikely to be a rocky super-Earth as previously reported, but rather a mini-Neptune with a $\sim$0.1% H/He envelope by mass or a water world with a water-mass fraction between 9 and 19% depending on the atmospheric composition and relative abundance of Fe and Mg. While the mini-Neptune case would not be habitable, a water-abundant LHS 1140 b potentially has habitable surface conditions according to 3D global climate models, suggesting liquid water at the substellar point for atmospheres with relatively low CO$_2$ concentration, from Earth-like to a few bars.<br />Comment: 31 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in ApJL

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2310.15490
Document Type :
Working Paper