Formation and Structure of Low Density Exo-Neptunes
Leslie A. Rogers, Peter Bodenheimer, Jack J. Lissauer, and Sara Seager

TL;DR
This paper uses theoretical models to explore the formation, structure, and minimum plausible masses of low-density exo-Neptunes, suggesting they can be significantly less massive than Solar System analogs.
Contribution
It introduces new models for the formation and structure of low-density exo-Neptunes, including formation pathways and mass-radius relations, highlighting the possibility of smaller masses for these planets.
Findings
Neptune-size planets at 500K can have masses a few times Earth's.
Low-density exo-Neptunes can have masses less than ~4 Earth masses.
Warm Neptune-size planets can be significantly less massive than Solar System counterparts.
Abstract
Kepler has found hundreds of Neptune-size (2-6 R_Earth) planet candidates within 0.5 AU of their stars. The nature of the vast majority of these planets is not known because their masses have not been measured. Using theoretical models of planet formation, evolution and structure, we explore the range of minimum plausible masses for low-density exo-Neptunes. We focus on highly irradiated planets with T_eq>=500K. We consider two separate formation pathways for low-mass planets with voluminous atmospheres of light gases: core nucleated accretion and outgassing of hydrogen from dissociated ices. We show that Neptune-size planets at T_eq=500K with masses as small as a few times that of Earth can plausibly be formed core nucleated accretion coupled with subsequent inward migration. We also derive a limiting low-density mass-radius relation for rocky planets with outgassed hydrogen envelopes…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
