# The discoveries of WASP-91b, WASP-105b and WASP-107b: two warm Jupiters   and a planet in the transition region between ice giants and gas giants

**Authors:** D. R. Anderson, A. Collier Cameron, L. Delrez, A. P. Doyle, M. Gillon,, C. Hellier, E. Jehin, M. Lendl, P. F. L. Maxted, N. Madhusudhan, F. Pepe, D., Pollacco, D. Queloz, D. S\'egransan, B. Smalley, A. M. S. Smith, A. H. M. J., Triaud, O. D. Turner, S. Udry, and R. G. West

arXiv: 1701.03776 · 2018-02-09

## TL;DR

This paper reports the discovery of three transiting exoplanets, including two warm Jupiters and a planet in the transition region between ice giants and gas giants, providing insights into planetary composition and migration.

## Contribution

It presents the first detailed characterization of three new exoplanets, highlighting the transition between ice giants and gas giants and their host star properties.

## Key findings

- WASP-91b and WASP-105b are warm Jupiters orbiting metal-rich stars.
- WASP-107b is a low-mass gas giant in the transition region between ice giants and gas giants.
- WASP-107b's properties help define the lower mass limit for gas giant formation.

## Abstract

We report the discoveries of three transiting exoplanets. WASP-91b is a warm Jupiter (1.34 $M_{\rm Jup}$, 1.03 $R_{\rm Jup}$) in a 2.8-day orbit around a metal-rich K3 star. WASP-105b is a warm Jupiter (1.8 $M_{\rm Jup}$, 0.96 $R_{\rm Jup}$) in a 7.9-day orbit around a metal-rich K2 star. WASP-107b is a warm super-Neptune/sub-Saturn (0.12 $M_{\rm Jup}$, 0.94 $R_{\rm Jup}$) in a 5.7-day orbit around a solar-metallicity K6 star. Considering that giant planets seem to be more common around stars of higher metallicity and stars of higher mass, it is notable that the hosts are all metal-rich, late-type stars. With orbital separations that place both WASP-105b and WASP-107b in the weak-tide regime, measurements of the alignment between the planets' orbital axes and their stars' spin axes may help us to understand the inward migration of short-period, giant planets.   The mass of WASP-107b (2.2 $M_{\rm Nep}$, 0.40 $M_{\rm Sat}$) places it in the transition region between the ice giants and gas giants of the Solar System. Its radius of 0.94 $R_{\rm Jup}$ suggests that it is a low-mass gas giant with a H/He-dominated composition. The planet thus sets a lower limit of 2.2 $M_{\rm Nep}$ on the planetary mass above which large gaseous envelopes can be accreted and retained by proto-planets on their way to becoming gas giants. We may discover whether WASP-107b more closely resembles an ice giant or a gas giant by measuring its atmospheric metallicity via transmission spectroscopy, for which WASP-107b is a very good target.

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.03776/full.md

## Figures

10 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.03776/full.md

## References

52 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.03776/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.03776