A low-eccentricity migration pathway for a 13-h-period Earth analogue in a four-planet system
Luisa Maria Serrano, Davide Gandolfi, Alexander J. Mustill, Oscar, Barrag\'an, Judith Korth, Fei Dai, Seth Redfield, Malcolm Fridlund, Kristine, W. F. Lam, Mat\'ias R. D\'iaz, Sascha Grziwa, Karen A. Collins, John H., Livingston, William D. Cochran, Coel Hellier

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a four-planet system with an ultra-short period Earth-like planet, demonstrating a low-eccentricity migration pathway that explains the system's architecture without violent interactions.
Contribution
It presents the first four-planet system with a USP Earth analog whose current configuration is explained by quasi-static secular migration, challenging the violent high-eccentricity migration theory.
Findings
The innermost planet has a 13-hour orbital period and Earth-like characteristics.
The system's architecture can be explained by low-eccentricity, quasi-static inward migration.
Numerical simulations show migration from 0.02 au to current orbit in 2 Gyrs.
Abstract
It is commonly accepted that exoplanets with orbital periods shorter than 1 day, also known as ultra-short period (USP) planets, formed further out within their natal protoplanetary disk, before migrating to their current-day orbits via dynamical interactions. One of the most accepted theories suggests a violent scenario involving high-eccentricity migration followed by tidal circularization. Here, we present the discovery of a four planet system orbiting the bright (V=10.5) K6 dwarf star TOI-500. The innermost planet is a transiting, Earth-sized USP planet with an orbital period of 13 hours, a mass of 1.42 0.18 M, a radius of R, and a mean density of 4.89 gcm. Via Doppler spectroscopy, we discovered that the system hosts three outer planets on nearly circular orbits with periods of 6.6, 26.2, and 61.3d…
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