g and i'-band light curve of TOI-5205 with SDSS Virtual Observatory Resource

Authors
  1. Kanodia S.
  2. Mahadevan S.
  3. Libby-Roberts J.
  4. Stefansson G.
  5. Canas C.I.,Piette A.A.A.
  6. Boss A.
  7. Teske J.
  8. Chambers J.
  9. Zeimann G.
  10. Monson A.,Robertson P.
  11. Ninan J.P.
  12. Lin A.S.J.
  13. Bender C.F.
  14. Cochran W.D.,Diddams S.A.
  15. Gupta A.F.
  16. Halverson S.
  17. Hawley S.
  18. Kobulnicky H.A.,Metcalf A.J.
  19. Parker B.A.
  20. Powers L.
  21. Ramsey L.W.
  22. Roy A.
  23. Schwab C.,Swaby T.N.
  24. Terrien R.C.
  25. Wisniewski J.
  26. Published by
    CDS
Abstract

We present the discovery of TOI-5205b, a transiting Jovian planet orbiting a solar metallicity M4V star, which was discovered using Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite photometry and then confirmed using a combination of precise radial velocities, ground-based photometry, spectra, and speckle imaging. TOI-5205b has one of the highest mass ratios for M-dwarf planets, with a mass ratio of almost 0.3%, as it orbits a host star that is just 0.392{+/-}0.015 M{sun}. Its planetary radius is 1.03{+/-}0.03R_Jup_, while the mass is 1.08{+/-}0.06M_Jup_. Additionally, the large size of the planet orbiting a small star results in a transit depth of ~7%, making it one of the deepest transits of a confirmed exoplanet orbiting a main-sequence star. The large transit depth makes TOI-5205b a compelling target to probe its atmospheric properties, as a means of tracing the potential formation pathways. While there have been radial-velocity-only discoveries of giant planets around mid-M dwarfs, this is the first transiting Jupiter with a mass measurement discovered around such a low-mass host star. The high mass of TOI-5205b stretches conventional theories of planet formation and disk scaling relations that cannot easily recreate the conditions required to form such planets.

Keywords
  1. exoplanets
  2. m-stars
  3. infrared-photometry
  4. visible-astronomy
  5. photometry
Bibliographic source Bibcode
2023AJ....165..120K
See also HTML
https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/AJ/165/120
IVOA Identifier IVOID
ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/165/120
Document Object Identifer DOI
doi:10.26093/cds/vizier.51650120

Access

Web browser access HTML
http://vizier.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/VizieR-2?-source=J/AJ/165/120
https://vizier.iucaa.in/viz-bin/VizieR-2?-source=J/AJ/165/120
http://vizieridia.saao.ac.za/viz-bin/VizieR-2?-source=J/AJ/165/120
IVOA Table Access TAP
http://tapvizier.cds.unistra.fr/TAPVizieR/tap
Run SQL-like queries with TAP-enabled clients (e.g., TOPCAT).

History

2023-07-05T08:33:42Z
Resource record created
2023-07-05T08:33:42Z
Created
2023-09-27T10:10:46Z
Updated

Contact

Name
CDS support team
Postal Address
CDS, Observatoire de Strasbourg, 11 rue de l'Universite, F-67000 Strasbourg, France
E-Mail
cds-question@unistra.fr