An Ultra-Hot Neptune in the Neptune desert
James S. Jenkins, Mat\'ias R. D\'iaz, Nicol\'as T. Kurtovic, N\'estor, Espinoza, Jose I. Vines, Pablo A. Pe\~na Rojas, Rafael Brahm, Pascal Torres,, P\'ia Cort\'es-Zuleta, Maritza G. Soto, Eric D. Lopez, George W. King, Peter, J. Wheatley, Joshua N. Winn, David R. Ciardi

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of an ultra-hot Neptune-sized planet in the hot Neptune desert, challenging existing theories about atmospheric retention in such extreme environments.
Contribution
It presents the first confirmed ultra-short-period Neptune in the hot Neptune desert, with detailed mass, radius, and atmospheric composition estimates.
Findings
Planet has a radius of 4.6 Re and mass of 29 Me.
It retains a significant H/He envelope despite high temperature.
Discovery challenges current understanding of atmospheric loss in close-in Neptunes.
Abstract
About one out of 200 Sun-like stars has a planet with an orbital period shorter than one day: an ultra-short-period planet (Sanchis-ojeda et al. 2014; Winn et al. 2018). All of the previously known ultra-short-period planets are either hot Jupiters, with sizes above 10 Earth radii (Re), or apparently rocky planets smaller than 2 Re. Such lack of planets of intermediate size (the "hot Neptune desert") has been interpreted as the inability of low-mass planets to retain any hydrogen/helium (H/He) envelope in the face of strong stellar irradiation. Here, we report the discovery of an ultra-short-period planet with a radius of 4.6 Re and a mass of 29 Me, firmly in the hot Neptune desert. Data from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (Ricker et al. 2015) revealed transits of the bright Sun-like star \starname\, every 0.79 days. The planet's mean density is similar to that of Neptune,…
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