TOI-132 b: A short-period planet in the Neptune desert transiting a V = 11.3 G-type star∗
Author
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Díaz, Matías R.
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Jenkins, James S.
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Gandolfi, Davide
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López, Eric D.
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Soto, Maritza G.
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Cortés Zuleta, Pía Gabriela
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Berdiñas, Zaira M.
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Stassun, Keivan G.
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Collins, Karen A.
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Vines, José I.
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Ziegler, Carl
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Fridlund, Malcom
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Jensen, Eric L. N.
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Murgas, Felipe
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Santerne, Alexandre
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Wilson, Paul A.
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Esposito, Massimiliano
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Hatzes, Artie P.
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Johnson, Marshall C.
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Lam, Kristine W. F.
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Livingston, John H.
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Van Eylen, Vincent
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Narita, Norio
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Briceño, César
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Collins, Kevin I.
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Csizmadia, Szilárd
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Fausnaugh, Michael
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Gan, Tianjun
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García, Rafael A.
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Georgieva, Iska
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Glidden, Ana
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González Cuesta, Lucía
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Jenkins, Jon M.
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Latham, David W.
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Law, Nicholas
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Mann, Andrew W.
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Mathur, Savita
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Mireles, Ismael
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Morris, Robert
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Pallé, Enric
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Persson, Carina M.
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Ricker, George
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Rinehart, Stephen
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Rose, Mark E.
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Seager, Sara
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Smith, Jeffrey C.
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Tan, Thiam-Guan
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Tokovinin, Andrei
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Vanderburg, Andrew
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Vanderspek, Roland
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Winn, Joshua N.
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Yahalomi, Daniel A.
Admission date
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2020-07-08T16:15:35Z
Available date
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2020-07-08T16:15:35Z
Publication date
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2020
Cita de ítem
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MNRAS 493, 973–985 (2020)
es_ES
Identifier
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10.1093/mnras/staa277
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/175858
Abstract
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The Neptune desert is a feature seen in the radius-period plane, whereby a notable dearth of short period, Neptune-like planets is found. Here, we report the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) discovery of a new short-period planet in the Neptune desert, orbiting the G-type dwarf TYC 8003-1117-1 (TOI-132). TESS photometry shows transit-like dips at the level of similar to 1400 ppm occurring every similar to 2.11 d. High-precision radial velocity follow-up with High Accuracy Radial Velocity Planet Searcher confirmed the planetary nature of the transit signal and provided a semi-amplitude radial velocity variation of 11.38(-0.85)(+0.84) m s(-1), which, when combined with the stellar mass of 0.97 +/- 0.06 M-circle dot, provides a planetary mass of 22.40(-1.92)(+1.90) M-circle plus. Modelling the TESS light curve returns a planet radius of 3.42(-0.14)(+0.13) R-circle plus , and therefore the planet bulk density is found to be 3.08(-0.46)(+0.44) g cm(-3). Planet structure models suggest that the bulk of the planet mass is in the form of a rocky core, with an atmospheric mass fraction of 4.3(-2.3)(+1.2) percent. TOI-132 b is a TESS Level 1 Science Requirement candidate, and therefore priority follow-up will allow the search for additional planets in the system, whilst helping to constrain low-mass planet formation and evolution models, particularly valuable for better understanding of the Neptune desert.