K2-231 b: A sub-Neptune exoplanet transiting a solar twin in Ruprecht 147
Jason Lee Curtis, Andrew Vanderburg, Guillermo Torres, Adam L. Kraus,, Daniel Huber, Andrew W. Mann, Aaron C. Rizzuto, Howard Isaacson, Andrew W., Howard, Christopher E. Henze, Benjamin J. Fulton, and Jason T. Wright

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and characterization of a sub-Neptune exoplanet transiting a solar twin in the Ruprecht 147 star cluster, providing detailed stellar and planetary parameters and confirming its planetary nature.
Contribution
The study presents the first confirmed planet in Ruprecht 147, combining K2 photometry, spectroscopy, and modeling to characterize the planet and host star with high precision.
Findings
Discovered a 2.5 R⊕ sub-Neptune in Ruprecht 147
Estimated planetary mass of approximately 7 Earth masses
Validated the planet using BLENDER statistical analysis
Abstract
We identify a sub-Neptune exoplanet ( R) transiting a solar twin in the Ruprecht 147 star cluster (3 Gyr, 300 pc, [Fe/H] = +0.1 dex). The ~81 day light curve for EPIC 219800881 (V = 12.71) from K2 Campaign 7 shows six transits with a period of 13.84 days, a depth of ~0.06%, and a duration of ~4 hours. Based on our analysis of high-resolution MIKE spectra, broadband optical and NIR photometry, the cluster parallax and interstellar reddening, and isochrone models from PARSEC, Dartmouth, and MIST, we estimate the following properties for the host star: M, R, and K. This star appears to be single, based on our modeling of the photometry, the low radial velocity variability measured over nearly ten years, and Keck/NIRC2 adaptive optics imaging and aperture-masking…
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.
