A sub-Neptune sized planet transiting the M2.5-dwarf G 9-40: Validation with the Habitable-zone Planet Finder
Gudmundur Stefansson, Caleb Ca\~nas, John Wisniewski, Paul Robertson,, Suvrath Mahadevan, Marissa Maney, Shubham Kanodia, Corey Beard, Chad F., Bender, Peter Brunt, J. Christopher Clemens, William Cochran, Scott A., Diddams, Michael Endl, Eric B. Ford, Connor Fredrick

TL;DR
This paper validates a nearby sub-Neptune-sized planet around an M-dwarf using high-precision NIR RV, photometry, and imaging, highlighting its suitability for future atmospheric characterization with JWST and other telescopes.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive validation method combining NIR RV, specialized photometry, and adaptive optics imaging for exoplanet confirmation around M-dwarfs.
Findings
The planet has a radius of about 2 Earth radii.
Estimated mass is approximately 5 Earth masses.
The planet's RV semi-amplitude is around 4.1 m/s.
Abstract
We validate the discovery of a 2 Earth radii sub-Neptune-size planet around the nearby high proper motion M2.5-dwarf G 9-40 (EPIC 212048748), using high-precision near-infrared (NIR) radial velocity (RV) observations with the Habitable-zone Planet Finder (HPF), precision diffuser-assisted ground-based photometry with a custom narrow-band photometric filter, and adaptive optics imaging. At a distance of , G 9-40b is the second closest transiting planet discovered by K2 to date. The planet's large transit depth (3500ppm), combined with the proximity and brightness of the host star at NIR wavelengths (J=10, K=9.2) makes G 9-40b one of the most favorable sub-Neptune-sized planet orbiting an M-dwarf for transmission spectroscopy with JWST, ARIEL, and the upcoming Extremely Large Telescopes. The star is relatively inactive with a rotation period of 29 days…
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