# Hot, rocky and warm, puffy super-Earths orbiting TOI-402 (HD 15337)

**Authors:** X. Dumusque, O. Turner, C. Dorn, J.D. Eastman, R. Allart, V., Adibekyan, S. Sousa, N.C. Santos, C. Mordasini, V. Bourrier, F. Bouchy, A., Coffinet, M.D. Davies, R.F. Diaz, M.M. Fausnaugh, A. Glidden, N. Guerrero,, C.E. Henze, J.M. Jenkins, D.W. Latham, C. Lovis, M. Mayor, F. Pepe, E.V., Quintana, G.R. Ricker, P. Rowden, D. Segransan, A. Suarez Mascareno, S., Seager, J .D. Twicken, S. Udry, R. K. Vanderspek, J.N. Winn

arXiv: 1903.05419 · 2019-07-10

## TL;DR

This study confirms two super-Earths orbiting TOI-402, analyzing TESS and HARPS data to determine their masses, radii, and potential atmospheric evolution, highlighting the impact of stellar irradiation on their sizes.

## Contribution

First detailed mass and radius measurements of two super-Earths in the same system, providing insights into planetary evolution and the radius gap.

## Key findings

- Both planets are super-Earths with similar masses but different radii.
- Photo-evaporation likely causes the radius difference between the planets.
- Planets have low eccentricities, consistent with circular orbits.

## Abstract

TESS is revolutionising the search for planets orbiting bright and nearby stars. In sectors 3 and 4, TESS observed TOI-402 (TIC-120896927), a bright V=9.1 K1 dwarf also known as HD 15337, and found two transiting signals with period of 4.76 and 17.18 days and radius of 1.90 and 2.21\,\Rearth. This star was observed as part of the radial-velocity search for planets using the HARPS spectrometer, and 85 precise radial-velocity measurements were obtained over a period of 14 years. In this paper, we analyse the HARPS radial-velocity measurements in hand to confirm the planetary nature of these two signals. By reanalysing TESS photometry and host star parameters using EXOFASTv2, we find that TOI-402.01 and TOI-402.02 have periods of 4.75642$\pm$0.00021 and 17.1784$\pm$0.0016 days and radii of 1.70$\pm$0.06 and 2.52$\pm$0.11\,\Rearth\,(precision 3.6 and 4.2\%), respectively. By analysing the HARPS radial-velocity measurements, we find that those planets are both super-Earths with masses of 7.20$\pm$0.81 and 8.79$\pm$1.67\,\Mearth\,(precision 11.3 and 19.0\%), and small eccentricities compatible with zero at 2$\sigma$. Although having rather similar masses, the radius of these two planets is really different, putting them on different sides of the radius gap. With stellar irradiation 160 times more important than Earth for TOI-402.01 and only 29 times more for TOI-402.02, it is likely that photo-evaporation is at the origin of this radius difference. Those two planets, being in the same system and therefore being in the same irradiation environment are therefore extremely important to perform comparative exoplanetology across the evaporation valley and thus bring constraints on the mechanisms responsible for the radius gap.

## Full text

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## Figures

27 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.05419/full.md

## References

130 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.05419/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.05419