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Rapid contraction of giant planets orbiting the 20-million-year-old star V1298 Tau

Authors :
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
European Commission
Suárez Mascareño, A.
Damasso, M.
Lodieu, N.
Sozzetti, Alessandro
Béjar, Victor J. S.
Benatti, S.
Zapatero Osorio, María Rosa
Micela, Giusi
Rebolo López, Rafael
Desidera, S.
Murgas, F.
Claudi, Riccardo
González Hernández, Jonay I.
Malavolta, L.
Del Burgo, C.
D'Orazi, V.
Amado, Pedro J.
Locci, D.
Tabernero, H. M.
Marzari, F.
Aguado, D. S.
Turrini, D.
Cardona Guillén, C.
Toledo-Padrón, B.
Maggio, Antonio
Aceituno, Jesús
Bauer, Florian Franz
Caballero, J. A.
Chinchilla, P.
Esparza-Borges, E.
González-Álvarez, E.
Granzer, Thomas
Luque, R.
Martín, Eduardo Lorenzo
Nowak, G.
Oshagh, M.
Pallé, Enric
Parviainen, H.
Quirrenbach, Andreas
Reiners, Ansgar
Ribas, Ignasi
Strassmeier, K. G.
Weber, M.
Mallonn, Matthias
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
European Commission
Suárez Mascareño, A.
Damasso, M.
Lodieu, N.
Sozzetti, Alessandro
Béjar, Victor J. S.
Benatti, S.
Zapatero Osorio, María Rosa
Micela, Giusi
Rebolo López, Rafael
Desidera, S.
Murgas, F.
Claudi, Riccardo
González Hernández, Jonay I.
Malavolta, L.
Del Burgo, C.
D'Orazi, V.
Amado, Pedro J.
Locci, D.
Tabernero, H. M.
Marzari, F.
Aguado, D. S.
Turrini, D.
Cardona Guillén, C.
Toledo-Padrón, B.
Maggio, Antonio
Aceituno, Jesús
Bauer, Florian Franz
Caballero, J. A.
Chinchilla, P.
Esparza-Borges, E.
González-Álvarez, E.
Granzer, Thomas
Luque, R.
Martín, Eduardo Lorenzo
Nowak, G.
Oshagh, M.
Pallé, Enric
Parviainen, H.
Quirrenbach, Andreas
Reiners, Ansgar
Ribas, Ignasi
Strassmeier, K. G.
Weber, M.
Mallonn, Matthias
Publication Year :
2022

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 years1,2. These theoretical expectations remain untested so far as the detection and characterization of very young planets is extremely challenging due to the intense stellar activity of their host stars3,4. Only the recent discoveries of young planetary transiting systems allow initial constraints to be placed on evolutionary models5,6,7. 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 system composed of four planets, two Neptune-sized, one Saturn-sized and one Jupiter-sized8,9. Here we report a multi-instrument radial velocity campaign of V1298 Tau, which allowed us to determine the masses of two of the planets in the system. We find that the two outermost giant planets, V1298 Tau b and e (0.64 ± 0.19 and 1.16 ± 0.30 Jupiter masses, respectively), seem to contradict our knowledge of early-stages planetary evolution. According to models, they should reach their mass–radius combination only hundreds of millions of years after formation. This result suggests that giant planets can contract much more quickly than usually assumed. © 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1356198567
Document Type :
Electronic Resource