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It takes two planets in resonance to tango around K2-146

Authors :
Lam, Kristine W. F.
Korth, Judith
Masuda, Kento
Csizmadia, Szilárd
Eigmüller, Philipp
Stefánsson, Guðmundur Kári
Endl, Michael
Albrecht, Simon
Luque, Rafael
Livingston, John H.
Hirano, Teruyuki
Sobrino, Roi Alonso
Barragán, Oscar
Cabrera, Juan
Carleo, Ilaria
Chaushev, Alexander
Cochran, William D.
Dai, Fei
de Leon, Jerome
Deeg, Hans J.
Erikson, Anders
Esposito, Massimiliano
Fridlund, Malcolm
Fukui, Akihiko
Gandolfi, Davide
Georgieva, Iskra
Cuesta, Lucá Gonzalez
Grziwa, Sascha
Guenther, Eike W.
Hatzes, Artie P.
Hidalgo, Diego
Hjorth, Maria
Kabath, Petr
Knudstrup, Emil
Lund, Mikkel N.
Mahadevan, Suvrath
Mathur, Savita
Rodríguez, Pilar Montañes
Murgas, Felipe
Narita, Norio
Nespral, David
Niraula, Prajwal
Palle, Enric
Pätzold, Martin
Persson, Carina M.
Prieto-Arranz, Jorge
Rauer, Heike
Redfield, Seth
Ribas, Ignasi
Robertson, Paul
Skarka, Marek
Smith, Alexis M. S.
Subjak, Jan
Van Eylen, Vincent
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

K2-146 is a cool, 0.358 M_sun dwarf that was found to host a mini-Neptune with a 2.67-days period. The planet exhibited strong transit timing variations (TTVs) of greater than 30 minutes, indicative of the presence of a further object in the system. Here we report the discovery of the previously undetected outer planet, K2-146 c, in the system using additional photometric data. K2-146 c was found to have a grazing transit geometry and a 3.97-day period. The outer planet was only significantly detected in the latter K2 campaigns presumably because of precession of its orbital plane. The TTVs of K2-146 b and c were measured using observations spanning a baseline of almost 1200 days. We found strong anti-correlation in the TTVs, suggesting the two planets are gravitationally interacting. Our TTV and transit model analyses revealed that K2-146 b has a radius of 2.25 $\pm$ 0.10 \R_earth and a mass of 5.6 $\pm$ 0.7 M_earth, whereas K2-146 c has a radius of $2.59_{-0.39}^{+1.81}$ R_earth and a mass of 7.1 $\pm$ 0.9 M_earth. The inner and outer planets likely have moderate eccentricities of $e = 0.14 \pm 0.07$ and $0.16 \pm 0.07$, respectively. Long-term numerical integrations of the two-planet orbital solution show that it can be dynamically stable for at least 2 Myr. The evaluation of the resonance angles of the planet pair indicates that K2-146 b and c are likely trapped in a 3:2 mean motion resonance. The orbital architecture of the system points to a possible convergent migration origin.<br />Comment: 19 pages with 13 figures and 4 tables; Submitted

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1907.11141
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ab66c9