TOI-132 b: A short-period planet in the Neptune desert transiting a $V=11.3$ G-type star
Mat\'ias R. D\'iaz, James S. Jenkins, Davide Gandolfi, Eric D. Lopez,, Maritza G. Soto, P\'ia Cort\'es-Zuleta, Zaira M. Berdi\~nas, Keivan G., Stassun, Karen A. Collins, Jos\'e I. Vines, Carl Ziegler, Malcolm Fridlund,, Eric J. N. Jensen, Felipe Murgas, Alexandre Santerne

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and characterization of TOI-132 b, a short-period Neptune-like planet in the Neptune desert, providing insights into planet composition and formation in this sparsely populated region.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed characterization of a Neptune desert planet using TESS and HARPS data, highlighting its rocky core and atmospheric properties.
Findings
Planet has a mass of approximately 23 Earth masses.
Planet radius is about 3.4 Earth radii, with a density indicating a rocky core.
Atmospheric mass fraction estimated at around 4.3%.
Abstract
The Neptune desert is a feature seen in the radius-mass-period plane, whereby a notable dearth of short period, Neptune-like planets is found. Here we report the {\it TESS} discovery of a new short-period planet in the Neptune desert, orbiting the G-type dwarf TYC\,8003-1117-1 (TOI-132). {\it TESS} photometry shows transit-like dips at the level of 1400 ppm occurring every 2.11 days. High-precision radial velocity follow-up with HARPS confirmed the planetary nature of the transit signal and provided a semi-amplitude radial velocity variation of 11.5 m s, which, when combined with the stellar mass of , provides a planetary mass of 22.83 . Modeling the {\it TESS} high-quality light curve returns a planet radius of 3.43 , and therefore the planet bulk density is found to be…
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