An ablating super-Earth in an eccentric binary from the Dispersed Matter Planet Project [EPA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1912.10793


Earth mass exoplanets are difficult to detect. The Dispersed Matter Planet Project (DMPP) identifies stars which are likely to host the most detectable low mass exoplanets. The star DMPP-3 (HD 42936) shows signs of circumstellar absorption, indicative of mass loss from ablating planets. Here we report the radial velocity (RV) discovery of a highly eccentric 507 d binary companion and a hot super-Earth planet in a 6.67 d orbit around the primary star. DMPP-3A is a solar type star while DMPP-3B is just massive enough to fuse hydrogen. The binary, with semi-major axis 1.22 $\pm$ 0.02 AU, is considerably tighter than others known to host planets orbiting only one of the component stars. The configuration of the DMPP-3 planetary system is rare and indicates dynamical interactions, though the evolutionary history is not entirely clear. DMPP-3Ab is possibly the residual core of a giant planet precursor, consistent with the inferred circumstellar gas shroud.

Read this paper on arXiv…

J. Barnes, C. Haswell, D. Staab, et. al.
Tue, 24 Dec 19
53/79

Comments: Accepted for publication by Nature Astronomy on 12th November 2019 (Main article, Methods and Supplementary Information; 18 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables)