HATS-7b: A Hot Super Neptune Transiting a Quiet K Dwarf Star
G. \'A. Bakos (1), K. Penev (1), D. Bayliss (2,3), J. D. Hartman (1),, G. Zhou (2,1), R. Brahm (4,5), L. Mancini (6), M. de Val-Borro (1), W. Bhatti, (1), A. Jord\'an (4,5), M. Rabus (4,6), N. Espinoza (4,5), Z. Csubry (1), A., W. Howard (7), B. J. Fulton (7,8)

TL;DR
The paper reports the discovery and characterization of HATS-7b, a transiting super-Neptune orbiting a quiet K dwarf star, providing detailed measurements of its mass, radius, and composition, and establishing new insights into super-Neptune properties.
Contribution
First detailed characterization of HATS-7b, a super-Neptune, including precise mass, radius, and composition measurements, expanding knowledge of Neptune-like exoplanets.
Findings
HATS-7b has a mass of 0.120 MJ and radius of 0.563 RJ.
HATS-7b's composition is similar to Uranus and Neptune.
HATS-7b is one of the smallest radius planets discovered by ground-based transit surveys.
Abstract
IW ../submit_V2/abstract.txt ( Row 1 Col 1 6:48 Ctrl-K H for help We report the discovery by the HATSouth network of HATS-7b, a transiting Super-Neptune with a mass of 0.120+/-0.012MJ, a radius of 0.563+/-(0.046,0.034)RJ, and an orbital period of 3.1853days. The host star is a moderately bright (V=13.340+/-0.010mag, K_S=10.976+/-0.026mag) K dwarf star with a mass of 0.849+/-0.027Msun , a radius of 0.815+/-(0.049,-0.035)Rsun, and a metallicity of [Fe/H]=+0.250+/-0.080. The star is photometrically quiet to within the precision of the HATSouth measurements and has low RV jitter. HATS-7b is the second smallest radius planet discovered by a wide-field ground-based transit survey, and one of only a handful of Neptune-size planets with mass and radius determined to 10% precision. Theoretical modeling of HATS-7b yields a hydrogen-helium fraction of 18+/-4% (rock-iron core and H2-He envelope),…
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