dc.creatorTeske, Johanna
dc.creatorDíaz, Matías R.
dc.creatorLuque, Rafael
dc.creatorMočnik, Teo
dc.creatorSeidel, Julia V.
dc.creatorFernández Otegi, Jon
dc.creatorFeng, Fabo
dc.creatorJenkins, James S.
dc.creatorPallè, Enric
dc.creatorSégransan, Demien
dc.creatorUdry, Stéphane
dc.creatorCollins, Karen A.
dc.creatorEastman, Jason D.
dc.creatorRicker, George R.
dc.creatorVanderspek, Roland
dc.creatorLatham, David W.
dc.creatorSeager, Sara
dc.creatorWinn, Joshua N.
dc.creatorJenkins, Jon M.
dc.creatorAnderson, David R.
dc.creatorBarclay, Thomas
dc.creatorBouchy, François
dc.creatorBurt, Jennifer A.
dc.creatorPaul Butler, R.
dc.creatorCaldwell, Douglas A.
dc.creatorCollins, Kevin I.
dc.creatorCrane, Jeffrey D.
dc.creatorDorn, Caroline
dc.creatorFlowers, Erin
dc.creatorHaldemann, Jonás
dc.creatorHelled, Ravit
dc.creatorHellier, Coel
dc.creatorJensen, Eric L. N.
dc.creatorKane, Stephen R.
dc.creatorLaw, Nicholas
dc.creatorLissauer, Jack J.
dc.creatorMann, Andrew W.
dc.creatorMarmier, Maxime
dc.creatorNielsen, Louise Dyregaard
dc.creatorRose, Mark E.
dc.creatorShectman, Stephen A.
dc.creatorShporer, Avi
dc.creatorTorres, Guillermo
dc.creatorWang, Sharon
dc.creatorWolfgang, Angie
dc.creatorWong, Ian
dc.creatorZiegler, Carl
dc.date.accessioned2021-08-24T23:06:05Z
dc.date.available2021-08-24T23:06:05Z
dc.date.created2021-08-24T23:06:05Z
dc.date.issued2020
dc.identifierThe Astronomical Journal, 160:96 (17pp), 2020 August
dc.identifier10.3847/1538-3881/ab9f95
dc.identifierhttps://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/181517
dc.description.abstractThe Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite mission was designed to find transiting planets around bright, nearby stars. Here, we present the detection and mass measurement of a small, short-period (≈4 days) transiting planet around the bright (V=7.9), solar-type star HD 86226 (TOI-652, TIC 22221375), previously known to host a long-period (∼1600 days) giant planet. HD 86226c (TOI-652.01) has a radius of 2.16±0.08R⊕ and a mass of - 7.25+1.12 1.19 M⊕, based on archival and new radial velocity data. We also update the parameters of the longer-period, not-known-to-transit planet, and find it to be less eccentric and less massive than previously reported. The density of the transiting planet is 3.97 gcm−3, which is low enough to suggest that the planet has at least a small volatile envelope, but the mass fractions of rock, iron, and water are not well-constrained. Given the host star brightness, planet period, and location of the planet near both the “radius gap” and the “hot Neptune desert,” HD 86226c is an interesting candidate for transmission spectroscopy to further refine its composition.
dc.languageen
dc.publisherIOP Publishing Ltd
dc.rightshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/cl/
dc.rightsAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Chile
dc.sourceThe Astronomical Journal
dc.subjectGeneva-copenhagen survey
dc.subjectEquation-of-state
dc.subjectSolar neighborhood
dc.subjectError-correction
dc.subjectSuper-earths
dc.subjectK-star
dc.subjectExoplanet
dc.subjectSearch
dc.subjectRadius
dc.subjectMetallicity
dc.titleTESS Reveals a short-period sub-neptune sibling (HD 86226c) to a known long-period giant planet
dc.typeArtículo de revista


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