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A Mini-Neptune from TESS and CHEOPS Around the 120 Myr Old AB Dor member HIP 94235

Authors :
George Zhou
Christopher P. Wirth
Chelsea X. Huang
Alexander Venner
Kyle Franson
Samuel N. Quinn
L. G. Bouma
Adam L. Kraus
Andrew W. Mann
Elisabeth. R. Newton
Diana Dragomir
Alexis Heitzmann
Nataliea Lowson
Stephanie T. Douglas
Matthew Battley
Edward Gillen
Amaury Triaud
David W. Latham
Steve B. Howell
J. D. Hartman
Benjamin M. Tofflemire
Robert A. Wittenmyer
Brendan P. Bowler
Jonathan Horner
Stephen R. Kane
John Kielkopf
Peter Plavchan
Duncan J. Wright
Brett C. Addison
Matthew W. Mengel
Jack Okumura
George Ricker
Roland Vanderspek
Sara Seager
Jon M. Jenkins
Joshua N. Winn
Tansu Daylan
Michael Fausnaugh
Michelle Kunimoto
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The TESS mission has enabled discoveries of the brightest transiting planet systems around young stars. These systems are the benchmarks for testing theories of planetary evolution. We report the discovery of a mini-Neptune transiting a bright star in the AB Doradus moving group. HIP 94235 (TOI-4399, TIC 464646604) is a Vmag=8.31 G-dwarf hosting a 3.00 -0.28/+0.32 Rearth mini-Neptune in a 7.7 day period orbit. HIP 94235 is part of the AB Doradus moving group, one of the youngest and closest associations. Due to its youth, the host star exhibits significant photometric spot modulation, lithium absorption, and X-ray emission. Three 0.06% transits were observed during Sector-27 of the TESS Extended Mission, though these transit signals are dwarfed by the 2% peak-to-peak photometric variability exhibited by the host star. Follow-up observations with CHEOPS confirmed the transit signal and prevented the erosion of the transit ephemeris. HIP 94235 is part of a 50 AU G-M binary system. We make use of diffraction limited observations spanning 11 years, and astrometric accelerations from Hipparchos and Gaia, to constrain the orbit of HIP 94235 B. HIP 94235 is one of the tightest stellar binaries to host an inner planet. As part of a growing sample of bright, young planet systems, HIP 94235 b is ideal for follow-up transit observations, such as those that investigate the evaporative processes driven by high-energy radiation that may sculpt the valleys and deserts in the Neptune population.<br />Accepted for publication in AJ

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00046256
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cc3ce1b385832af72c61691fb637635f