The metal-poor atmosphere of a potential sub-Neptune progenitor
/ Authors
S. Barat, J. D'esert, A. Vazan, R. Baeyens, M. Line, J. Fortney, Trevor J. David, J. Livingston, B. Jacobs, Vatsal Panwar
and 5 more authors
Hinna Shivkumar, K. Todorov, Lorenzo Pino, G. Mraz, E. Petigura
/ Abstract
Young transiting exoplanets offer a unique opportunity to characterize the atmospheres of freshly formed and evolving planets. We present the transmission spectrum of V1298 Tau b, a 23-Myr-old warm Jupiter-sized (0.91 ± 0.05 RJ, where RJ is the radius of Jupiter) planet orbiting a pre-main-sequence star. We detect a mostly clear primordial atmosphere with an exceptionally large atmospheric scale height, and a water vapour absorption at a 5σ level of significance, from which we estimate a planetary mass upper limit (23 Earth masses, 0.12 g cm−3 at a 3σ level). This is one of the lowest-density planets discovered so far. We retrieve a low atmospheric metallicity (logZ=−0.7−0.7+0.8solar\documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$$\log{Z}=-0.{7}_{-0.7}^{+0.8}\,{\mathrm{solar}}$$\end{document}), consistent with solar/sub-solar values. Our findings challenge the expected mass–metallicity relation from core-accretion theory. Our observations can instead be explained by in situ formation via pebble accretion together with ongoing evolutionary mechanisms. We do not detect methane, which hints at a hotter-than-expected interior from just the formation entropy of this planet. Our observations suggest that V1298 Tau b is likely to evolve into a sub-Neptune. V1298 Tau b is a 20–30-Myr-old Jovian-sized planet with a haze-free, metal-poor atmosphere and a potentially hot interior. These properties suggest that V1298 Tau b formed in situ via pebble accretion and that it is still evolving and likely to become a Neptune- or sub-Neptune-sized planet.
Journal: Nature Astronomy