1 research outputs found
TOI-4201: An Early M-dwarf Hosting a Massive Transiting Jupiter Stretching Theories of Core-Accretion
We confirm TOI-4201 b as a transiting Jovian mass planet orbiting an early M
dwarf discovered by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite. Using ground
based photometry and precise radial velocities from NEID and the Planet Finder
Spectrograph, we measure a planet mass of 2.59 M,
making this one of the most massive planets transiting an M-dwarf. The planet
is 0.4\% the mass of its 0.63 M host and may have a heavy
element mass comparable to the total dust mass contained in a typical Class II
disk. TOI-4201 b stretches our understanding of core-accretion during the
protoplanetary phase, and the disk mass budget, necessitating giant planet
formation to either take place much earlier in the disk lifetime, or perhaps
through alternative mechanisms like gravitational instability.Comment: To be submitted to AAS journals on 14th July 202