Uncovering the true periods of the young sub-Neptunes orbiting TOI-2076
Hugh P. Osborn, Andrea Bonfanti, Davide Gandolfi, Christina Hedges,, Adrien Leleu, Andrea Fortier, David Futyan, Pascal Gutermann, Pierre F. L., Maxted, Luca Borsato, Karen A. Collins, J. Gomes da Silva, Yilen G\'omez, Maqueo Chew, Matthew J. Hooton, Monika Lendl

TL;DR
This study precisely determined the orbital periods of two long-period sub-Neptunes orbiting TOI-2076 using targeted photometry, revealing their true periods, improved planetary radii measurements, and potential for atmospheric characterization.
Contribution
The paper introduces a combined approach using MonoTools and multi-telescope follow-up to accurately identify true orbital periods of planets with ambiguous transit data.
Findings
Confirmed the orbital period of TOI-2076 c as approximately 21 days.
Confirmed the orbital period of TOI-2076 d as approximately 35 days.
Detected anti-correlated TTV signals indicating near-resonant planetary interactions.
Abstract
Context: TOI-2076 is a transiting three-planet system of sub-Neptunes orbiting a bright (G = 8.9 mag), young ( Myr) K-type star. Although a validated planetary system, the orbits of the two outer planets were unconstrained as only two non-consecutive transits were seen in TESS photometry. This left 11 and 7 possible period aliases for each. Aims: To reveal the true orbits of these two long-period planets, precise photometry targeted on the highest-probability period aliases is required. Long-term monitoring of transits in multi-planet systems can also help constrain planetary masses through TTV measurements. Methods: We used the MonoTools package to determine which aliases to follow, and then performed space-based and ground-based photometric follow-up of TOI-2076 c and d with CHEOPS, SAINT-EX, and LCO telescopes. Results: CHEOPS observations revealed a clear detection…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Code & Models
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
