An Earth-sized exoplanet with a Mercury-like composition
A. Santerne, B. Brugger, D. J. Armstrong, V. Adibekyan, J. Lillo-Box,, H. Gosselin, A. Aguichine, J.-M. Almenara, D. Barrado, S. C. C. Barros, D., Bayliss, I. Boisse, A. S. Bonomo, F. Bouchy, D. J. A. Brown, M. Deleuil, E., Delgado Mena, O. Demangeon, R. F. D\'iaz, A. Doyle

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of an Earth-sized exoplanet with a Mercury-like composition, providing insights into planetary formation and evolution scenarios that lead to metal-rich terrestrial planets.
Contribution
It presents the first known Mercury-like exoplanet, expanding understanding of planetary diversity and formation processes beyond our solar system.
Findings
The exoplanet has a core-mass fraction similar to Mercury.
It challenges expectations based on host-star chemistry.
It suggests diverse formation or evolutionary histories for terrestrial planets.
Abstract
The Earth, Venus, Mars, and some extrasolar terrestrial planets have a mass and radius that is consistent with a mass fraction of about 30% metallic core and 70% silicate mantle. At the inner frontier of the solar system, Mercury has a completely different composition, with a mass fraction of about 70% metallic core and 30% silicate mantle. Several formation or evolution scenarios are proposed to explain this metal-rich composition, such as a giant impact, mantle evaporation, or the depletion of silicate at the inner-edge of the proto-planetary disk. These scenarios are still strongly debated. Here we report the discovery of a multiple transiting planetary system (K2-229), in which the inner planet has a radius of 1.165+/-0.066 Rearth and a mass of 2.59+/-0.43 Mearth. This Earth-sized planet thus has a core-mass fraction that is compatible with that of Mercury, while it was expected to…
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