HD 183579b: a warm sub-Neptune transiting a solar twin detected by TESS
/ Authors
T. Gan, M. Bedell, S. Wang, D. Foreman-Mackey, J. Mel'endez, S. Mao, K. Stassun, S. Howell, C. Ziegler, R. Wittenmyer
and 41 more authors
C. Hellier, K. Collins, Avi Shporer, G. Ricker, R. Vanderspek, D. Latham, S. Seager, J. Winn, J. Jenkins, B. Addison, S. Ballard, T. Barclay, J. Bean, B. Bowler, C. Briceño, I. Crossfield, J. Dittman, J. Horner, E. Jensen, S. Kane, J. Kielkopf, L. Kreidberg, N. Law, A. Mann, M. Mengel, E. Morgan, J. Okumura, H. Osborn, M. Paegert, P. Plavchan, R. Schwarz, B. Shiao, Jeffrey C. Smith, L. Spina, C. Tinney, G. Torres, J. Twicken, M. Vezie, Gavin Wang, D. Wright, Hui Zhang
/ Abstract
We report the discovery and characterization of a transiting warm sub-Neptune planet around the nearby bright (V = 8.75 mag, K = 7.15 mag) solar twin HD 183579, delivered by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). The host star is located 56.8 ± 0.1 pc away with a radius of R* = 0.97 ± 0.02 R⊙ and a mass of M* = 1.03 ± 0.05 M⊙. We confirm the planetary nature by combining space and ground-based photometry, spectroscopy, and imaging. We find that HD 183579b (TOI-1055b) has a radius of Rp = 3.53 ± 0.13 R⊕ on a 17.47 d orbit with a mass of Mp = 11.2 ± 5.4 M⊕ (3σ mass upper limit of 27.4 M⊕). HD 183579b is the fifth brightest known sub-Neptune planet system in the sky, making it an excellent target for future studies of the interior structure and atmospheric properties. By performing a line-by-line differential analysis using the high-resolution and signal-to-noise ratio HARPS spectra, we find that HD 183579 joins the typical solar twin sample, without a statistically significant refractory element depletion.
Journal: Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society