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Dynamical masses of two infant giant planets

Authors :
Alejandro Suárez Mascareño
Mario Damasso
Nicolas Lodieu
Alessandro Sozzetti
Víctor Béjar
Serena Benatti
María Rosa Zapatero Osorio
Giusi Micela
Rafael Rebolo
Silvano Desidera
Felipe Murgas
Riccardo Claudi
Jonay González-Hernández
Luca Malavolta
Carlos del Burgo
Valentina D'Orazi
Pedro Amado
Daniele Locci
Hugo Tabernero
Francesco Marzari
David Aguado
Diego Turrini
Carlos Cardona Guillén
Borja Toledo Padrón
Antonio Maggio
Jesús Aceituno
Florian Bauer
Jose Caballero
Patricia Chinchilla
Emma Esparza-Borges
Esther González-Álvarez
Thomas Granzer
Rafael Luque
Eduardo Martín Guerrero
Grzegorz Nowak
Mahmoudreza Oshagh
Enric Pallé
Hannu Parviainen
Andreas Quirrenbach
Ansgar Reiners
Ignasi Ribas
Klaus Strassmeier
Michael Weber
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Current theories of planetary evolution predict that infant giant planets have large radii and very low densities before they slowly contract to reach their final size after about several hundred million years 1, 2. These theoretical expectations remain untested to date, despite the increasing number of exoplanetary discoveries, as the detection and characterisation of very young planets is extremely challenging due to the intense stellar activity of their host stars 3, 4. However, the recent discoveries of young planetary transiting systems allow to place initial constraints on evolutionary models5–9. With an estimated age of 20 million years, V1298 Tau is one of the youngest solar-type stars known to host transiting planets: it harbours a multiple system composed of two Neptune-sized, one Saturn-sized, and one Jupiter-sized planets 10, 11. Here we report the dynamical masses of two of the four planets. We find that planet b, with an orbital period of 24 days, has a mass of 0.60 Jupiter masses and a density similar to the giant planets of the Solar System and other known giant exoplanets with significantly older ages 12, 13. Planet e, with an orbital period of 40 days, has a mass of 1.21 Jupiter masses and a density larger than most giant exoplanets. This is unexpected for planets at such a young age and suggests that some giant planets might evolve and contract faster than anticipated, thus challenging current models of planetary evolution.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........4d7096045403b3ad15dbaf430dc72b0e