A Mini-Neptune Orbiting the Metal-poor K Dwarf BD+29 2654

Dai, Fei and Schlaufman, Kevin C. and Reggiani, Henrique and Bouma, Luke and Howard, Andrew W. and Chontos, Ashley and Pidhorodetska, Daria and Van Zandt, Judah and Akana Murphy, Joseph M. and Rubenzahl, Ryan A. and Polanski, Alex S. and Lubin, Jack and Beard, Corey and Giacalone, Steven and Holcomb, Rae and Batalha, Natalie M. and Crossfield, Ian and Dressing, Courtney and Fulton, Benjamin and Huber, Daniel and Isaacson, Howard and Kane, Stephen R. and Petigura, Erik A. and Robertson, Paul and Weiss, Lauren M. and Belinski, Alexander A. and Boyle, Andrew W. and Burke, Christopher J. and Castro-González, Amadeo and Ciardi, David R. and Daylan, Tansu and Fukui, Akihiko and Gill, Holden and Guerrero, Natalia M. and Hellier, Coel and Howell, Steve B. and Lillo-Box, Jorge and Murgas, Felipe and Narita, Norio and Pallé, Enric and Rodriguez, David R. and Savel, Arjun B. and Shporer, Avi and Stassun, Keivan G. and Striegel, Stephanie and Caldwell, Douglas A. and Jenkins, Jon M. and Ricker, George R. and Seager, Sara and Vanderspek, Roland and Winn, Joshua N. (2023) A Mini-Neptune Orbiting the Metal-poor K Dwarf BD+29 2654. The Astronomical Journal, 166 (2). p. 49. ISSN 0004-6256

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Abstract

We report the discovery and Doppler mass measurement of a 7.4 days 2.3 R⊕ mini-Neptune around a metal-poor K dwarf BD+29 2654 (TOI-2018). Based on a high-resolution Keck/HIRES spectrum, the Gaia parallax, and multiwavelength photometry from the UV to the mid-infrared, we found that the host star has ${T}_{\mathrm{eff}}={4174}_{-42}^{+34}$ K, $\mathrm{log}g={4.62}_{-0.03}^{+0.02}$, [Fe/H] = − 0.58 ± 0.18, M* = 0.57 ± 0.02 M⊙, and R* = 0.62 ± 0.01 R⊙. Precise Doppler measurements with Keck/HIRES revealed a planetary mass of Mp = 9.2 ± 2.1 M⊕ for TOI-2018 b. TOI-2018 b has a mass and radius that are consistent with an Earthlike core, with a ∼1%-by-mass hydrogen/helium envelope or an ice–rock mixture. The mass of TOI-2018 b is close to the threshold for runaway accretion and hence giant planet formation. Such a threshold is predicted to be around 10M⊕ or lower for a low-metallicity (low-opacity) environment. If TOI-2018 b is a planetary core that failed to undergo runaway accretion, it may underline the reason why giant planets are rare around low-metallicity host stars (one possibility is their shorter disk lifetimes). With a K-band magnitude of 7.1, TOI-2018 b may be a suitable target for transmission spectroscopy with the James Webb Space Telescope. The system is also amenable to metastable Helium observation; the detection of a Helium exosphere would help distinguish between a H/He-enveloped planet and a water world.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Archive Paper Guardians > Physics and Astronomy
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@archive.paperguardians.com
Date Deposited: 16 Nov 2023 05:59
Last Modified: 16 Nov 2023 05:59
URI: http://archives.articleproms.com/id/eprint/2249

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