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TOI-532b: The Habitable-zone Planet Finder confirms a Large Super Neptune in the Neptune Desert orbiting a metal-rich M dwarf host

Authors :
Kanodia, Shubham
Stefansson, Gudmundur
Canas, Caleb I.
Maney, Marissa
Lin, Andrea S.
Ninan, Joe P.
Jones, Sinclaire
Monson, Andrew J.
Parker, Brock A.
Kobulnicky, Henry A.
Rothenberg, Jason
Beard, Corey
Lubin, Jack
Robertson, Paul
Gupta, Arvind F.
Mahadevan, Suvrath
Cochran, William D.
Bender, Chad F.
Diddams, Scott A.
Fredrick, Connor
Halverson, Samuel P.
Hawley, Suzanne L.
Hearty, Fred R.
Hebb, Leslie
Kopparapu, Ravi K.
Metcalf, Andrew J.
Ramsey, Lawrence W.
Roy, Arpita
Schwab, Christian
Schutte, Maria
Terrien, Ryan C.
Wisniewski, John P.
Wright, Jason T.
Kanodia, Shubham
Stefansson, Gudmundur
Canas, Caleb I.
Maney, Marissa
Lin, Andrea S.
Ninan, Joe P.
Jones, Sinclaire
Monson, Andrew J.
Parker, Brock A.
Kobulnicky, Henry A.
Rothenberg, Jason
Beard, Corey
Lubin, Jack
Robertson, Paul
Gupta, Arvind F.
Mahadevan, Suvrath
Cochran, William D.
Bender, Chad F.
Diddams, Scott A.
Fredrick, Connor
Halverson, Samuel P.
Hawley, Suzanne L.
Hearty, Fred R.
Hebb, Leslie
Kopparapu, Ravi K.
Metcalf, Andrew J.
Ramsey, Lawrence W.
Roy, Arpita
Schwab, Christian
Schutte, Maria
Terrien, Ryan C.
Wisniewski, John P.
Wright, Jason T.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

We confirm the planetary nature of TOI-532b, using a combination of precise near-infrared radial velocities with the Habitable-zone Planet Finder, TESS light curves, ground based photometric follow-up, and high-contrast imaging. TOI-532 is a faint (J$\sim 11.5$) metal-rich M dwarf with Teff = $3957\pm69$ K and [Fe/H] = $0.38\pm0.04$; it hosts a transiting gaseous planet with a period of $\sim 2.3$ days. Joint fitting of the radial velocities with the TESS and ground-based transits reveal a planet with radius of $5.82\pm0.19$ R$_{\oplus}$, and a mass of $61.5_{-9.3}^{+9.7}$ M$_{\oplus}$. TOI-532b is the largest and most massive super Neptune detected around an M dwarf with both mass and radius measurements, and it bridges the gap between the Neptune-sized planets and the heavier Jovian planets known to orbit M dwarfs. It also follows the previously noted trend between gas giants and host star metallicity for M dwarf planets. In addition, it is situated at the edge of the Neptune desert in the Radius--Insolation plane, helping place constraints on the mechanisms responsible for sculpting this region of planetary parameter space.<br />Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures, 4 tables. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2006.14546

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1312086910
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847.1538-3881.ac1940