Evidence for the volatile-rich composition of a 1.5-$R_\oplus$ planet
Caroline Piaulet, Bj\"orn Benneke, Jose M. Almenara, Diana Dragomir,, Heather A. Knutson, Daniel Thorngren, Merrin S. Peterson, Ian J. M., Crossfield, Eliza M.-R. Kempton, Daria Kubyshkina, Andrew W. Howard, Ruth, Angus, Howard Isaacson, Lauren M. Weiss, Charles A. Beichman

TL;DR
This study provides evidence that the 1.5 Earth-radius planet Kepler-138 d is a volatile-rich water world with a thick water mantle and atmosphere, challenging the assumption that all small planets are rocky.
Contribution
It presents detailed transit and radial velocity data showing that some super-Earth-sized planets are water-rich, not rocky, expanding understanding of planetary compositions.
Findings
Kepler-138 d is a water-rich planet with 11-14% volatiles by mass.
Kepler-138 c is a similar water world, indicating multiple water-rich planets in the system.
Kepler-138 e is likely a non-transiting planet in the habitable zone.
Abstract
The population of planets smaller than approximately is widely interpreted as consisting of rocky worlds, generally referred to as super-Earths. This picture is largely corroborated by radial-velocity (RV) mass measurements for close-in super-Earths but lacks constraints at lower insolations. Here we present the results of a detailed study of the Kepler-138 system using 13 Hubble and Spitzer transit observations of the warm-temperate planet Kepler-138 d (~350 K) combined with new Keck/HIRES RV measurements of its host star. We find evidence for a volatile-rich "water world" nature of Kepler-138 d, with a large fraction of its mass contained in a thick volatile layer. This finding is independently supported by transit timing variations, RV observations (), as well as the flat optical/IR…
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