Searching for GEMS TOI-5688 A b, a Low-density Giant Orbiting a High-metallicity Early M-dwarf

Open Access
Authors
  • Varghese Reji
  • Shubham Kanodia
  • Joe P. Ninan
  • Caleb I. Cañas
  • Jessica Libby-Roberts
  • Andrea S.J. Lin
  • Arvind F. Gupta
  • Tera N. Swaby
  • Alexander Larsen
  • Henry A. Kobulnicky
  • Philip I. Choi
  • Nez Evans
  • Sage Santomenna
  • Isabelle Winnick
  • Larry Yu
  • Jaime A. Alvarado-Montes
  • Chad F. Bender
  • Lia Marta Bernabó
  • Cullen H. Blake
  • William D. Cochran
  • Scott A. Diddams
  • Samuel Halverson
  • Te Han
  • Fred Hearty
  • Sarah E. Logsdon
  • Suvrath Mahadevan
  • Michael W. McElwain
  • Andrew Monson
  • Paul Robertson
  • Devendra K. Ojha
  • Arpita Roy
  • Christian Schwab
  • Gudmundur Stefansson ORCID logo
  • Jason Wright
Publication date 03-2025
Journal Astronomical Journal
Article number 187
Volume | Issue number 169 | 3
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract

We present the discovery of a low-density planet orbiting the high-metallicity early M-dwarf TOI-5688 A b. This planet was characterized as part of the search for transiting giant planets (R ≳ 8 R) through the Searching for Giant Exoplanets around M-dwarf Stars (GEMS) survey. The planet was discovered with the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, and characterized with ground-based transits from Red Buttes Observatory, the Table Mountain Observatory of Pomona College, and radial velocity (RV) measurements with the Habitable-Zone Planet Finder on the 10 m Hobby Eberly Telescope and NEID on the WIYN 3.5 m telescope. From the joint fit of transit and RV data, we measure a planetary mass and radius of 124 ± 24 M (0.39 ± 0.07 MJ) and 10.4 ± 0.7 R (0.92 ± 0.06 RJ), respectively. The spectroscopic and photometric analysis of the host star TOI-5688 A shows that it is a metal-rich ([Fe/H] = 0.47 ± 0.16 dex) M2V star, favoring the core-accretion formation pathway as the likely formation scenario for this planet. Additionally, Gaia astrometry suggests the presence of a wide-separation binary companion, TOI-5688 B, which has a projected separation of ~5″ (1110 au) and is an M4V, making TOI-5688 A b part of the growing number of GEMS in wide-separation binary systems.

Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ada7ea
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85219569072
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Searching for GEMS (Final published version)
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