TOI-1634 b: an Ultra-Short Period Keystone Planet Sitting Inside the M Dwarf Radius Valley
R. Cloutier, D. Charbonneau, K.G. Stassun, F. Murgas, A. Mortier, R., Massey, J.J. Lissauer, D.W. Latham, J. Irwin, R.D. Haywood, P. Guerra, E., Girardin, S.A. Giacalone, P. Bosch-Cabot, A. Bieryla, J. Winn, C.A. Watson,, R. Vanderspek, S. Udry, M. Tamura, A. Sozzetti

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and characterization of TOI-1634 b, an ultra-short period planet within the M dwarf radius valley, providing evidence supporting a gas-depleted formation scenario over primordial envelope retention.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed mass and radius measurements of a keystone planet in the M dwarf radius valley, testing formation theories.
Findings
TOI-1634 b has a mass of approximately 4.9 Earth masses.
The planet's composition is inconsistent with an Earth-like rocky planet.
Results support a gas-depleted formation mechanism for planets in the M dwarf radius valley.
Abstract
Studies of close-in planets orbiting M dwarfs have suggested that the M dwarf radius valley may be well-explained by distinct formation timescales between enveloped terrestrials, and rocky planets that form at late times in a gas-depleted environment. This scenario is at odds with the picture that close-in rocky planets form with a primordial gaseous envelope that is subsequently stripped away by some thermally-driven mass loss process. These two physical scenarios make unique predictions of the rocky/enveloped transition's dependence on orbital separation such that studying the compositions of planets within the M dwarf radius valley may be able to establish the dominant physics. Here, we present the discovery of one such keystone planet: the ultra-short period planet TOI-1634 b ( days, , ) orbiting a nearby M2 dwarf…
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