Constraints on the mass and atmospheric composition and evolution of the low-density young planet DS Tuc A b
S. Benatti, M. Damasso, F. Borsa, D. Locci, I. Pillitteri, S., Desidera, A. Maggio, G. Micela, S. Wolk, R. Claudi, L. Malavolta, D., Modirrousta-Galian

TL;DR
This study characterizes the mass, atmospheric properties, and evolution of the young, low-density exoplanet DS Tuc A b, highlighting the challenges posed by stellar activity and providing insights into its atmospheric evaporation and future evolution.
Contribution
First measurement of the planetary mass upper limit and atmospheric characterization of DS Tuc A b, demonstrating the impact of stellar activity on detection and evolution modeling of young exoplanets.
Findings
Mass upper limit of 14.4 Earth masses for DS Tuc A b.
Planetary system is nearly aligned.
Planet's future radius will fall within the Fulton gap after evaporation.
Abstract
We performed a radial velocity (RV) monitoring of the 40 Myr old star DS Tuc A with HARPS at the ESO-3.6m to determine the planetary mass of its 8.14-days planet, first revealed by TESS. We also observed two planetary transits with HARPS and ESPRESSO at ESO-VLT, to measure the Rossiter-McLaughlin (RM) effect and characterise the planetary atmosphere. We measured the high-energy emission of the host with XMM observations to investigate models for atmospheric evaporation. We employed Gaussian Processes (GP) regression to model the high level of the stellar activity, which is more than 40 times larger than the expected RV planetary signal. We extracted the transmission spectrum of DS Tuc A b from the ESPRESSO data and searched for atmospheric elements/molecules either by single-line retrieval and by performing cross-correlation with a set of theoretical templates. Through a set of…
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