TESS-Keck Survey. V. Twin Sub-Neptunes Transiting the Nearby G Star HD 63935

Scarsdale, Nicholas; Murphy, Joseph M. Akana; Batalha, Natalie M.; Crossfield, Ian J. M.; Dressing, Courtney D.; Fulton, Benjamin; Howard, Andrew W.; Huber, Daniel; Isaacson, Howard; Kane, Stephen R.; Petigura, Erik A.; Robertson, Paul; Roy, Arpita; Weiss, Lauren M.; Beard, Corey; Behmard, Aida; Chontos, Ashley; Christiansen, Jessie L.; Ciardi, David R.; Claytor, Zachary R.; Collins, Karen A.; Collins, Kevin I.; Dai, Fei; Dalba, Paul A.; Dragomir, Diana; Fetherolf, Tara; Fukui, Akihiko; Giacalone, Steven; Gonzales, Erica J.; Hill, Michelle L.; Hirsch, Lea A.; Jensen, Eric L. N.; Kosiarek, Molly R.; de Leon, Jerome P.; Lubin, Jack; Lund, Michael B.; Luque, Rafael; Mayo, Andrew W.; Močnik, Teo; Mori, Mayuko; Narita, Norio; Nowak, Grzegorz; Pallé, Enric; Rabus, Markus; Rosenthal, Lee J.; Rubenzahl, Ryan A.; Schlieder, Joshua E.; Shporer, Avi; Stassun, Keivan G.; Twicken, Joe; Wang, Gavin; Yahalomi, Daniel A.; Jenkins, Jon; Latham, David W.; Ricker, George R.; Seager, S.; Vanderspek, Roland; Winn, Joshua N.
Bibliographical reference

The Astronomical Journal

Advertised on:
11
2021
Number of authors
58
IAC number of authors
4
Citations
13
Refereed citations
12
Description
We present the discovery of two nearly identically sized sub-Neptune transiting planets orbiting HD 63935, a bright (V = 8.6 mag), Sun-like (Teff = 5560 K) star at 49 pc. TESS identified the first planet, HD 63935 b (TOI-509.01), in Sectors 7 and 34. We identified the second signal (HD 63935 c) in Keck High Resolution Echelle Spectrometer and Lick Automated Planet Finder radial velocity data as part of our follow-up campaign. It was subsequently confirmed with TESS photometry in Sector 34 as TOI-509.02. Our analysis of the photometric and radial velocity data yielded a robust detection of both planets with periods of 9.0600 ± 0.007 and 21.40 ± 0.0019 days, radii of 2.99 ± 0.14 and 2.90 ± 0.13 R⊕, and masses of 10.8 ± 1.8 and 11.1 ± 2.4 M⊕. We calculated densities for planets b and c consistent with a few percent of the planet mass in hydrogen/helium envelopes. We also describe our survey's efforts to choose the best targets for James Webb Space Telescope atmospheric follow-up. These efforts suggest that HD 63935 b has the most clearly visible atmosphere of its class. It is the best target for transmission spectroscopy (ranked by the transmission spectroscopy metric, a proxy for atmospheric observability) in the so far uncharacterized parameter space comprising sub-Neptune-sized (2.6 R⊕ < Rp < 4 R⊕), moderately irradiated (100 F⊕ < Fp < 1000 F⊕) planets around G stars. Planet c is also a viable target for transmission spectroscopy, and given the indistinguishable masses and radii of the two planets, the system serves as a natural laboratory for examining the processes that shape the evolution of sub-Neptune planets.
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