K2 Discovers a Busy Bee: An Unusual Transiting Neptune Found in the Beehive Cluster
Christian Obermeier, Thomas Henning, Joshua E. Schlieder, Ian J. M., Crossfield, Erik A. Petigura, Andrew W. Howard, Evan Sinukoff, Howard, Isaacson, David R. Ciardi, Trevor J. David, Lynne A. Hillenbrand, Charles A., Beichmann, Steve B. Howell, Elliot Horch, Mark Everett

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a Neptune-sized transiting planet in the Beehive cluster, providing insights into planet formation and evolution in cluster environments, using data from the K2 mission and extensive follow-up observations.
Contribution
It presents the first transiting planet in the Beehive cluster, demonstrating the potential of K2 to find planets in open clusters and characterizing its unusual large radius.
Findings
Discovered a Neptune-sized planet in the Beehive cluster.
Validated the planet using multiple observational techniques.
Indicates possible systematic differences in planet properties in clusters.
Abstract
Open clusters have been the focus of several exoplanet surveys but only a few planets have so far been discovered. The \emph{Kepler} spacecraft revealed an abundance of small planets around small, cool stars, therefore, such cluster members are prime targets for exoplanet transit searches. Kepler's new mission, K2, is targeting several open clusters and star-forming regions around the ecliptic to search for transiting planets around their low-mass constituents. Here, we report the discovery of the first transiting planet in the intermediate-age (800 Myr) Beehive cluster (Praesepe). K2-95 is a faint () dwarf from K2's Campaign 5 with an effective temperature of , approximately solar metallicity and a radius of . We detected a transiting planet with a radius of…
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