Transit Timing Variations in the three-planet system: TOI-270
Laurel Kaye, Shreyas Vissapragada, Maximilian N. Gunther, Suzanne, Aigrain, Thomas Mikal-Evans, Eric L. N. Jensen, Hannu Parviainen, Francisco, J. Pozuelos, Lyu Abe, Jack S. Acton, Abdelkrim Agabi, Douglas R. Alves, David, R. Anderson, David J. Armstrong, Khalid Barkaoui

TL;DR
This study combines ground and space-based observations to analyze transit timing variations in the TOI-270 three-planet system, refining planetary masses, orbits, and compositions, and demonstrating the system's suitability for atmospheric studies.
Contribution
First detailed TTV analysis of TOI-270, providing precise planetary masses, eccentricities, and compositions, enhancing understanding of small transiting planet systems.
Findings
Detected significant TTVs with ~10-minute amplitude
Refined planetary masses and orbital parameters
Indicated Earth-like compositions for all three planets
Abstract
We present ground and space-based photometric observations of TOI-270 (L231-32), a system of three transiting planets consisting of one super-Earth and two sub-Neptunes discovered by TESS around a bright (K-mag=8.25) M3V dwarf. The planets orbit near low-order mean-motion resonances (5:3 and 2:1), and are thus expected to exhibit large transit timing variations (TTVs). Following an extensive observing campaign using 8 different observatories between 2018 and 2020, we now report a clear detection of TTVs for planets c and d, with amplitudes of 10 minutes and a super-period of 3 years, as well as significantly refined estimates of the radii and mean orbital periods of all three planets. Dynamical modeling of the TTVs alone puts strong constraints on the mass ratio of planets c and d and on their eccentricities. When incorporating recently published constraints from radial…
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