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A remnant planetary core in the hot-Neptune desert

Authors :
David J. Armstrong
Théo A. Lopez
Vardan Adibekyan
Richard A. Booth
Edward M. Bryant
Karen A. Collins
Magali Deleuil
Alexandre Emsenhuber
Chelsea X. Huang
George W. King
Jorge Lillo-Box
Jack J. Lissauer
Elisabeth Matthews
Olivier Mousis
Louise D. Nielsen
Hugh Osborn
Jon Otegi
Nuno C. Santos
Sérgio G. Sousa
Keivan G. Stassun
Dimitri Veras
Carl Ziegler
Jack S. Acton
Jose M. Almenara
David R. Anderson
David Barrado
Susana C. C. Barros
Daniel Bayliss
Claudia Belardi
Francois Bouchy
César Briceño
Matteo Brogi
David J. A. Brown
Matthew R. Burleigh
Sarah L. Casewell
Alexander Chaushev
Kevin I. Collins
Knicole D. Colón
Benjamin F. Cooke
Ian J. M. Crossfield
Rodrigo F. Díaz
Elisa Delgado Mena
Olivier D. S. Demangeon
Caroline Dorn
Xavier Dumusque
Philipp Eigmüller
Michael Fausnaugh
Pedro Figueira
Tianjun Gan
Siddharth Gandhi
Samuel Gill
Erica J. Gonzales
Michael R. Goad
Ravit Helled
Saeed Hojjatpanah
Steve B. Howell
James Jackman
James S. Jenkins
Jon M. Jenkins
Eric L. N. Jensen
Grant M. Kennedy
David W. Latham
Nicholas Law
Monika Lendl
Michael Lozovsky
Andrew W. Mann
Maximiliano Moyano
James McCormac
Farzana Meru
Christoph Mordasini
Ares Osborn
Don Pollacco
Didier Queloz
Liam Raynard
George R. Ricker
Pamela Rowden
Alexandre Santerne
Joshua E. Schlieder
Sara Seager
Lizhou Sha
Thiam-Guan Tan
Rosanna H. Tilbrook
Eric Ting
Stéphane Udry
Roland Vanderspek
Christopher A. Watson
Richard G. West
Paul A. Wilson
Joshua N. Winn
Peter Wheatley
Jesus Noel Villasenor
Jose I. Vines
Zhuchang Zhan
Source :
Nature. 583
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2020.

Abstract

The interiors of giant planets remain poorly understood. Even for the planets in the Solar System, difficulties in observation lead to large uncertainties in the properties of planetary cores. Exoplanets that have undergone rare evolutionary processes provide a route to understanding planetary interiors. Planets found in and near the typically barren hot-Neptune ‘desert’ (a region in mass–radius space that contains few planets) have proved to be particularly valuable in this regard. These planets include HD149026b, which is thought to have an unusually massive core, and recent discoveries such as LTT9779b and NGTS-4b, on which photoevaporation has removed a substantial part of their outer atmospheres. Here we report observations of the planet TOI-849b, which has a radius smaller than Neptune’s but an anomalously large mass of 39.1(+2.7−2.6) Earth masses and a density of 5.2(+0.7−0.8) grams per cubic centimetre, similar to Earth’s. Interior-structure models suggest that any gaseous envelope of pure hydrogen and helium consists of no more than 3.9(+0.8−0.9) per cent of the total planetary mass. The planet could have been a gas giant before undergoing extreme mass loss via thermal self-disruption or giant planet collisions, or it could have avoided substantial gas accretion, perhaps through gap opening or late formation. Although photoevaporation rates cannot account for the mass loss required to reduce a Jupiter-like gas giant, they can remove a small (a few Earth masses) hydrogen and helium envelope on timescales of several billion years, implying that any remaining atmosphere on TOI-849b is likely to be enriched by water or other volatiles from the planetary interior. We conclude that TOI-849b is the remnant core of a giant planet.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
583
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Nature
Notes :
985788, , NASA 17-XRP17 2-0024, , 80NSSC19K0097
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20210011744
Document Type :
Report
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2421-7