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TOI-1634 b: an Ultra-Short Period Keystone Planet Sitting Inside the M Dwarf Radius Valley

Authors :
Cloutier, R.
Charbonneau, D.
Stassun, K. G.
Murgas, F.
Mortier, A.
Massey, R.
Lissauer, J. J.
Latham, D. W.
Irwin, J.
Haywood, R. D.
Guerra, P.
Girardin, E.
Giacalone, S. A.
Bosch-Cabot, P.
Bieryla, A.
Winn, J.
Watson, C. A.
Vanderspek, R.
Udry, S.
Tamura, M.
Sozzetti, A.
Shporer, A.
Ségransan, D.
Seager, S.
Savel, A. B.
Sasselov, D.
Rose, M.
Ricker, G.
Rice, K.
Quintana, E. V.
Quinn, S. N.
Piotto, G.
Phillips, D.
Pepe, F.
Pedani, M.
Parviainen, H.
Palle, E.
Narita, N.
Molinari, E.
Micela, G.
McDermott, S.
Mayor, M.
Matson, R. A.
Fiorenzano, A. F. Martinez
Lovis, C.
López-Morales, M.
Kusakabe, N.
Jensen, E. L. N.
Jenkins, J. M.
Huang, C. X.
Howell, S. B.
Harutyunyan, A.
Fűrész, G.
Fukui, A.
Esquerdo, G. A.
Esparza-Borges, E.
Dumusque, X.
Dressing, C. D.
Di Fabrizio, L.
Collins, K. A.
Cameron, A. Collier
Christiansen, J. L.
Cecconi, M.
Buchhave, L. A.
Boschin, W.
Andreuzzi, G.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Studies of close-in planets orbiting M dwarfs have suggested that the M dwarf radius valley may be well-explained by distinct formation timescales between enveloped terrestrials, and rocky planets that form at late times in a gas-depleted environment. This scenario is at odds with the picture that close-in rocky planets form with a primordial gaseous envelope that is subsequently stripped away by some thermally-driven mass loss process. These two physical scenarios make unique predictions of the rocky/enveloped transition's dependence on orbital separation such that studying the compositions of planets within the M dwarf radius valley may be able to establish the dominant physics. Here, we present the discovery of one such keystone planet: the ultra-short period planet TOI-1634 b ($P=0.989$ days, $F=121 F_{\oplus}$, $r_p = 1.790^{+0.080}_{-0.081} R_{\oplus}$) orbiting a nearby M2 dwarf ($K_s=8.7$, $R_s=0.45 R_{\odot}$, $M_s=0.50 M_{\odot}$) and whose size and orbital period sit within the M dwarf radius valley. We confirm the TESS-discovered planet candidate using extensive ground-based follow-up campaigns, including a set of 32 precise radial velocity measurements from HARPS-N. We measure a planetary mass of $4.91^{+0.68}_{-0.70} M_{\oplus}$, which makes TOI-1634 b inconsistent with an Earth-like composition at $5.9\sigma$ and thus requires either an extended gaseous envelope, a large volatile-rich layer, or a rocky portion that is not dominated by iron and silicates to explain its mass and radius. The discovery that the bulk composition of TOI-1634 b is inconsistent with that of the Earth favors the gas-depleted formation mechanism to explain the emergence of the radius valley around M dwarfs with $M_s\lesssim 0.5 M_{\odot}$.<br />Comment: 27 pages, 13 figures, accepted to AAS journals. Our time series are included as a csv file in the arXiv source files

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2103.12790
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ac0157